STATE OF OHIO, Appellee v. DAVID WILLAN, Appellant
C.A. No. 24894
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS NINTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
Dated: December 21, 2011
2011-Ohio-6603
APPEAL FROM JUDGMENT ENTERED IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS COUNTY OF SUMMIT, OHIO CASE No. CR-2007-12-4233 (A)
DECISION AND JOURNAL ENTRY
BELFANCE, Judge.
{¶1} Appellant, David Willan, appeals from his convictions of multiple offenses in the Summit County Court of Common Pleas. For the reasons that follow, we affirm Mr. Willan‘s convictions of three counts of false representation in the registration of securities, and one count each of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, tampering with records, and falsification, but reverse the remainder of his convictions.
BACKGROUND
{¶2} All of Mr. Willan‘s convictions stem from activity conducted by two of his businesses between 2002 and 2007. For several years, Mr. Willan was in the business of buying, renovating, and reselling homes under the name of Summit Redevelopment, a business he owned with a partner. Mr. Willan later bought the partner‘s interest and changed the company‘s name to Evergreen Homes, LLC. Although Mr. Willan later started building new homes through a business named Evergreen Builders, that entity is not connected to the convictions in this case.
{¶3} As Evergreen Homes’ sales business grew, it developed a need for an influx of capital. By allowing the buyers to pay off 20 percent of the purchase price over time, Evergreen Homes received most of its profit from its home sales over time, as each home buyer paid the remaining 20 percent owed. Thus, Evergreen Homes’ assets consisted, in part, of notes receivable. Although Evergreen Homes’ assets were growing, it lacked the liquid funds it needed to purchase and renovate more homes. Mr. Willan hired an experienced partner in the regulatory and finance practice group of a reputable local law firm. He worked with attorneys at the firm for almost a year to develop a business plan to raise capital for Evergreen Homes. Mr. Willan continued to work with these attorneys for the next several years and repeatedly told them that he wanted to do whatever was necessary to ensure that his business complied with the law. Even when the law firm recommended action that exceeded that required under the law, Mr. Willan readily agreed to the firm‘s recommendations.
{¶4} To implement the business plan, Mr. Willan formed a separate company, Evergreen Investment Corporation. Evergreen Investment was formed to purchase and hold the second mortgages that Evergreen Homes had received through its home sales and to secure investors to provide capital that would enable it to purchase the mortgages from Evergreen
{¶5} In raising its capital through the issuance of debt securities, Evergreen Investment registered each offering with the Division of Securities of the Ohio Department of Commerce. Upon the advice of counsel, Mr. Willan hired a certified public accounting firm to prepare audited financial statements for Evergreen Investment to file with the Division prior to the initial offering. Although audited financials were not required by the Division, Mr. Willan followed his counsel‘s advice to fully disclose the financial condition of the company. With respect to the sale of its equity securities, Evergreen Homes did not register those securities with the Division of Securities, but instead filed forms with the Division to exempt the offerings of those securities from the state‘s registration requirements.
{¶6} Mr. Willan hired Daniel Mohler in early 2003 to sell homes for Evergreen Homes, but later asked him to manage the investment sales. Mohler had no experience with securities sales and was not licensed by the state to sell securities. It is not clear from the record exactly when Mohler began selling the securities or whether Mr. Willan might have handled the securities sales prior to Mohler. By the end of 2004, however, Mohler was the only person selling securities for the Evergreen companies. With the exception of a brief period of time during 2006 that he was paid a salary, Mohler received a commission for each security sale. Although Mohler eventually sold securities for both Evergreen Investment and Evergreen
{¶7} Evergreen Investment sold its debt securities through newspaper advertisements, which were approved by the Division prior to publication. The ads announced the availability of the high-risk, high-yield certificates and provided information about how prospective investors could obtain more information about the offering. The sales strategy was relatively simple: interested investors would be enticed by the ads to contact Evergreen Investment to request an offering circular and subscription agreement. The information provided warned the potential investor that the investment was high-risk, was dependent on fluctuations in the lending and housing market, and was not insured. After reviewing the information and determining whether the investment was appropriate, interested investors would purchase certificates. The certificates stated that the investments were unconditionally guaranteed by Evergreen Homes. Even though the investment was tied to the continued success of Evergreen Homes, numerous investors were attracted to the high rate of return and good reputation of the company. Mohler‘s job was to handle the paperwork when potential investors contacted the office. Although he occasionally met outside the office with potential investors who requested information, Mohler‘s sales role did not involve the active solicitation of new investors. Thus, Mohler was not the stereotypical salesman.
{¶8} During May 2006, when the Division conducted an audit of Mr. Willan‘s companies, it learned that Mohler was selling the securities and was receiving a commission for each sale. Both Mr. Willan and Mohler openly admitted that Mohler received a commission for each security sale. In fact, Mr. Willan made no attempt to conceal anything about his businesses during the audit, nor did he attempt to alter the companies’ books to disguise the form or amount
{¶9} Discovering that commissions were being paid in connection with each security sale was significant to the Division because, among other things, it felt that fact had been misrepresented on some of the securities filings. The Division also took the position that the payment of commissions to Mohler triggered the need for him to be licensed as a salesperson under Ohio law. The Division communicated with Mr. Willan‘s then-counsel, who had been unaware until that time that Mohler was selling the securities or that anyone was receiving commissions. After learning that Mohler was paid commissions to sell the securities, Mr. Willan‘s counsel informed the Division that Ohio law did not require Mohler to be licensed as a salesperson because he sold securities on behalf of the issuer, and therefore, the sales were exempted from state licensing requirements. Based on his counsel‘s advice, Mr. Willan maintained the position that the statutory prohibition on commissioned sales applied only to securities dealers, not salespeople. Nonetheless, in what appears to be an abundance of caution, Mr. Willan‘s counsel advised Mr. Willan to stop paying Mohler a commission and suggested that instead Mohler be paid a salary. Mr. Willan agreed. It appears that Mr. Willan‘s counsel believed that such action would be sufficient to resolve the matter with the Division.
{¶10} In addition to concerns of the Division of Securities that Evergreen Investment and Evergreen Homes were conducting business in violation of Ohio securities laws, the Summit County Sheriff‘s Department had become aware that many of the homes sold by Mr. Willan
{¶11} When an attorney at the Division of Securities first began investigating the Evergreen companies in March 2006, he discovered that the Division had received no complaints from any investors in either Evergreen company. Prior to the raid by the sheriff‘s department, all investors were paid everything they had been promised, and Evergreen Investment had honored all requests for redemption of certificates. After the raid, however, the Evergreen companies essentially screeched to a halt. The companies had little ability to continue operations because the sheriff‘s department had seized their computers and business records. Moreover, because the raid had generated a great deal of negative publicity, investors called to demand an immediate return of their investments and potential home sales customers apparently stopped doing business with the Evergreen companies. Although Mr. Willan‘s companies remained financially solvent with more than sufficient assets to cover the investments, because the bulk of the assets consisted of notes receivable and unsold homes, Mr. Willan lacked the liquidity to refund the investments
{¶12} On December 19, 2007, Mr. Willan and many other co-defendants were charged in a 147-count secret indictment. Mr. Willan, the primary defendant who initially faced 108 charges, was tried separately from his co-defendants and the charges against him were severed into two jury trials. The trial judge granted a judgment of acquittal on many of the charges against Mr. Willan before and during the first jury trial, which commenced on November 17, 2008. After the close of evidence, the jury considered 68 counts against Mr. Willan: one count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, five counts of false representation in the registration of securities, 20 counts of selling securities as an unlicensed dealer, one count of securities fraud, one count of aggravated theft, one count of theft from the elderly, 17 counts of violating the Ohio Small Loans Act, and 22 counts of acting as an unregistered second mortgage lender. The jury found Mr. Willan guilty of all 68 counts.
{¶13} On May 18, 2009, Mr. Willan‘s second trial began on the remaining nine counts in the indictment: one count of grand theft, six counts of money laundering, one count of tampering with records, and one count of falsification. The trial court granted a judgment of acquittal on the charge of grand theft and on five of the six counts of money laundering. The jury acquitted Mr. Willan of the remaining count of money laundering, but convicted him of one count of tampering with records and one count of falsification. He appeals from his convictions from both trials and raises six assignments of error.
SUFFICIENCY OF THE EVIDENCE
{¶14} Mr. Willan‘s first assignment of error is that his convictions were not supported by sufficient evidence and were against the manifest weight of the evidence. “‘Inasmuch as a
{¶15} For the most part, the evidence presented by the State was not disputed by Mr. Willan. Although Mr. Willan presented witnesses on his own behalf at the first trial, his witnesses did not dispute the evidence that was already before the trial court but offered testimony to support his legal argument that his conduct, as demonstrated by the State, did not constitute the offenses for which he was charged. In fact, some of the witnesses called by the State provided testimony that supported Mr. Willan‘s position. This Court‘s review of the sufficiency of evidence supporting a conviction is a question of law that this Court reviews de novo. State v. Thompkins (1997), 78 Ohio St. 3d 380, 386. This Court must determine whether, viewing the evidence in a light most favorable to the prosecution, it could have convinced any rational trier of fact of Mr. Willan‘s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. Jenks (1991), 61 Ohio St. 3d 259, paragraph two of the syllabus.
Mr. Willan‘s First Trial
{¶16} Because Mr. Willan‘s convictions resulted from two separate jury trials, this Court will review the evidence presented at each trial separately. Mr. Willan‘s convictions following the first trial fall into two main categories: (1) licensing or registration offenses, based on the State‘s allegation that Mr. Willan, through Evergreen Homes and/or Evergreen
Licensing/Registration Offenses
{¶17} Mr. Willan was convicted of engaging in the following business without obtaining a license or certificate of registration from the state: (1) selling securities; (2) issuing second mortgages; and (3) issuing small loans. Mr. Willan does not dispute that he conducted these types of activities or that he did so without obtaining a license or registration from the state. Instead, he argues that his business activities did not fall within the meaning of the applicable licensing or registration statutes.
Sale of Securities
{¶18} The most serious of Mr. Willan‘s licensing convictions were 20 counts of violating
{¶19} At all times relevant in the indictment,
“every person, other than a salesperson, who engages or professes to engage, in this state, for either all or part of the person‘s time, directly or indirectly, either in the business of the sale of securities for the person‘s own account, or in the business of the purchase or sale of securities for the account of others in the reasonable expectation of receiving a commission, fee, or other remuneration as a result of engaging in the purchase and sale of securities.”
{¶20}
“‘[d]ealer’ does not mean * * * [a]ny issuer, including any officer, director, employee, or trustee of, or member or manager of, or partner in, or any general partner of, any issuer, that sells, offers for sale, or does any act in furtherance of the sale of a security that represents an economic interest in that issuer, provided no commission, fee, or other similar remuneration is paid to or received by the issuer for the sale[.]”
We will refer to this as the “issuer exception.” “‘Issuer’ means every person who has issued, proposes to issue, or issues any security.”
{¶21} Mr. Willan concedes that the State presented evidence that while an employee of Evergreen Homes, Mohler handled and processed customer inquiries and requests for purchases of Evergreen Investment debt securities, that Evergreen Homes paid him commissions for the sales, that he was not licensed to sell securities, and that Evergreen Investment, Evergreen
{¶22} We turn to examining whether Mr. Willan, Evergreen Investment, and Evergreen Homes were dealers as contemplated by the Ohio Revised Code. It is clear from
“every person, other than a salesperson, who engages or professes to engage, in this state, for either all or part of the person‘s time, directly or indirectly, either in the business of the sale of securities for the person‘s own account, or in the business of the purchase or sale of securities for the account of others in the reasonable expectation of receiving a commission, fee, or other remuneration as a result of engaging in the purchase and sale of securities.”
R.C. 1707.01(E)(1) .
{¶23} Neither the phrase “for the person‘s own account[,]” nor the phrase “for the account of others” has been defined in the relevant chapter of the Ohio Revised Code. When words are not defined in a statute, they shall be given their ordinary meaning and construed according to common usage. See
{¶24} The latter half of the definition of dealer, discussing selling securities “for the account of others[,]” requires that the person, here Evergreen Homes, received a commission, fee, or similar remuneration for the sale of the securities.
{¶25} With respect to the first portion of the definition, discussing the sale of securities “for the person‘s own account,” it is unclear to what extent the sale would have to benefit the person to qualify as “for the person‘s own account” under the statute.
{¶26} Next, we turn to examining whether Evergreen Investment was a dealer as contemplated by
{¶27} As Mr. Willan, Evergreen Investment, and Evergreen Homes were not dealers, Mohler was not a salesperson, and Mr. Willan could not be convicted of aiding and abetting him
{¶28} Through each of the 20 counts at issue, the indictment contained allegations that Mr. Willan and Mohler:
“did commit the crime of UNLICENSED DEALER, in that they did, or did aid and/or abet another, to engage in an act or practice that violates division (A), (B), or (C) of
section 1707.14 , and/or as a salesperson sold securities in this state without being licensed pursuant tosection 1707.16 of the Revised Code , to wit: one or more ‘certificates’ * * * in violation ofSection 1707.44(A)(1) of the Revised Code [.]”
{¶29} Although Mr. Willan requested a jury instruction that would have limited the jury to considering only whether he aided and abetted Mohler as an unlicensed salesperson, the trial court did not give his proposed instruction. Instead, the trial court broadly instructed the jury on the allegations in the indictment that either Mr. Willan or Mohler acted as an unlicensed dealer:
“The law of Ohio provides no person shall act as a dealer unless the person is licensed as a dealer by the Division of Securities, except when the person is transacting business through or with a licensed dealer or when the person is an issuer selling securities issued by it or by its subsidiary.”
{¶30} The trial court also gave the statutory definition of the term “dealer.”
{¶32} In Van Meter v. Pub. Util. Comm. (1956), 165 Ohio St. 391, the Ohio Supreme Court construed this phrase within the context of
{¶33} Moreover, the meaning of
{¶34} Mohler, as an employee of Evergreen Homes, had no ability to employ salespeople, as he worked at the will and direction of Evergreen Homes.
{¶35} Consequently, the language of
{¶36} Because the State failed to prove that Mohler, Mr. Willan, Evergreen Homes, or Evergreen Investment qualified as salespeople or dealers within the meaning of
Second Mortgages
{¶37} Mr. Willan was convicted of 22 counts of being a second mortgage lender without first obtaining the requisite certificate of registration from the Division of Financial Institutions
{¶38} Again, Mr. Willan does not challenge the State‘s proof of those facts but raises a legal argument that his business activity did not require Evergreen Homes to register as a second mortgage lender under
{¶39} Evergreen Homes did not lend money to any of the homebuyers. The second mortgages at issue arose from an interest Evergreen Homes retained in the homes it sold. Evergreen Homes sold each of these properties using a similar financing arrangement: the homebuyer agreed to pay Evergreen Homes approximately 80 percent of the purchase price by borrowing money from a lending institution; the lender held a first mortgage on the property; and each homebuyer paid the remaining 20 percent balance to Evergreen Homes over time. The arrangement between Evergreen Homes and the homebuyer was something akin to a modified land contract, although Evergreen Homes did not retain title to the property. Instead, to protect its right to receive the 20 percent balance of the purchase price, Evergreen Homes held a second mortgage on each property and allowed the homebuyer to pay the remainder of the purchase price in installments.
{¶41} Although
{¶42} The New York Court of Appeals has held that this type of real estate transaction, in which a seller retains a mortgage on the property to secure his right to an unpaid balance of the purchase price, is not a “loan” because no money was advanced by the seller. See 10 East Realty, LLC v. Incorporated Village of Valley Stream (2009), 12 N.Y.3d 212, 215; Mandelino v. Fribourg (1968), 23 N.Y.2d 145. “The fact that the consideration in this sale mentions an interest rate and a term of payment, or that a mortgage was taken as a security interest, does not make this transaction involving a deferred payment plan” a loan within the meaning of the state constitution. 10 East Realty, at 215.
{¶44} This Court was unable to find any authority to support the State‘s position that a “loan” under
Small Loans
{¶45} Mr. Willan was convicted of 17 counts of violating the Small Loans Act. Specifically, he was convicted under
{¶46} The State‘s evidence that Mr. Willan issued small loans consisted solely of documentation that was seized in the search of his offices. The documents included promissory
{¶47} The State offered no testimony from any of the alleged borrowers, however, nor did Mr. Willan or anyone who worked for him testify about the alleged loans. The State sought to establish Mr. Willan‘s criminal liability based on the fact that he made loans without a license. It presented no evidence that he acted with any degree of culpability in violating the Small Loans Act, but instead proceeded on a theory that
{¶48} This Court found no legal authority to support the State‘s theory that
{¶49}
{¶51} Mr. Willan was convicted under
{¶52} The Supreme Court has also emphasized that “[t]he fact that the statute contains the phrase ‘No person shall’ does not mean that it is a strict criminal liability offense.” State v. Moody, 104 Ohio St.3d 244, 2004-Ohio-6395, at ¶16. Instead, it stressed that “[t]here must be other language in the statute to evidence the General Assembly‘s intent to impose strict criminal liability.” Id. There is no language in
{¶53} Lending money and charging interest is legal activity that is criminalized by
{¶54} Moreover, the potential criminal sanctions for violating
{¶55} For all of these reasons, this Court concludes that, in addition to the elements explicitly set forth in the statute,
{¶56} The State failed to present sufficient evidence that Mr. Willan violated
Misrepresentation Offenses
{¶57} Mr. Willan‘s misrepresentation convictions were based on his statements in the securities filings of Evergreen Homes and the offering circular of Evergreen Investment that no commissions would be paid in connection with the sale of the securities. These offenses focus on misrepresentations that were made on securities forms filed with the state and in the offering circular for the Evergreen Investment debt securities. Mr. Willan concedes that the representations were false because Mohler was paid a commission for most of the securities sales. His challenges to the sufficiency of evidence focus primarily on whether these
Registering Securities
{¶58} Mr. Willan was convicted of five counts of making a material false representation for the purpose of registering or exempting securities from registration when he registered two separate offerings of Evergreen Investment‘s debt securities and when he filed for an exemption from registration of three separate offerings of equity securities. Mr. Willan was alleged to have committed these offenses during 2004 and 2005. At that time,
{¶59} Although all of these convictions involved Mr. Willan‘s misrepresentations about the payment of commissions in connection with the securities sales, because he filed entirely different forms with the state for the two types of securities, this Court will address them separately. Counts two and five of the indictment focused on Mr. Willan‘s registration of two offerings of debt securities issued by Evergreen Investment. On February 18, 2004, Evergreen Investment filed forms with the Division of Securities of the Ohio Department of Commerce to register a $5 million offering of debt securities. The securities consisted of certificates that would be sold at face value in multiples of $500, earn interest at a set rate, and would mature at the end of six months, one year, or two years.
{¶60} The registration paperwork filed by Evergreen Investment included the required Form 6(A)(1), as well as the offering circular that Evergreen Investment would use to inform
{¶61} Although Mr. Willan concedes that the statement in the circular regarding commissions was false, and that the circular was filed along with his registration paperwork, he maintains that the State failed to prove that the false statements in the circular were made for the purpose of registering securities or that they were material to the registration process. He argues that the State‘s evidence demonstrated that the purpose of the statements in the circular was to sell the securities, yet he was convicted of making false statements for the purpose of registering the securities, not the offense of making a false representation for the purpose of selling securities under
{¶62} Although many federal cases involve material misrepresentations in the registration of securities, those cases provide little guidance because they involve civil suits brought by investors and, necessarily, focus on whether the misrepresentation was material to investors’ decisions to invest. See, e.g., TSC Industries, Inc. v. Northway (1976), 426 U.S. 438. The focus here was not whether investors’ decisions would have been affected by Mr. Willan‘s misstatement about the commissions but whether the Division of Securities was materially misled in its decision to register the securities. The transaction at hand was registration, so the focus of this offense was on whether Mr. Willan‘s misrepresentation likely would have
{¶63} The State presented the testimony of Sheldon Safko, formerly an attorney with the Division of Securities, who testified that the Division reviews the offering circular as part of the registration process to make sure that investors will have the information they need to make a competent decision about whether to invest. He further explained that the offering circular is “like a road map for the investor.” The circular should include information about the company and the investment product so an investor can make an informed decision whether to invest in the company. Safko did not testify, however, that this information would have affected the registration of Evergreen Investment‘s securities in any way. He gave no explanation of how the information about commissions, or any other information in the circular, has any bearing on the Division‘s decision to approve or process the registration of a securities offering. Although the State established that the information in the circular was relevant to the sale of securities, it offered no evidence that Mr. Willan made this misstatement for the purpose of registering the securities or that it was material or relevant to the registration of the security offering. Therefore, as to Mr. Willan‘s convictions under counts two and five of the indictment, the State presented insufficient evidence that he knowingly made material and relevant false statements for the purpose of registering the debt security offerings.
{¶64} Mr. Willan‘s remaining convictions of false representation in the registration of securities, as stated in counts three, four, and six of the indictment, focused on entirely different forms that Mr. Willan filed on behalf of Evergreen Homes to exempt its equity securities from state registration. On November 24, 2004, April 29, 2005, and July 25, 2005, Mr. Willan filed the requisite “Form D” with the Division of Securities to exempt a total of $4 million in equity
{¶65} The State introduced the Form Ds that are at issue in these counts to prove that Mr. Willan made misrepresentations on the Form D that was required to be filed to exempt the securities from registration. It argued that Mr. Willan falsely represented that no commissions would be paid in connection with the sales of the securities and that Mr. Willan failed to list the payment of commissions as an expense. At trial, the State focused its argument on Mr. Willan‘s failure to include the payment of commissions in the listing of expenses on each Form D. In particular, Section C, Item 4 of each Form D filed by Evergreen Homes included a line to list the amount of “Sales Commissions” that would be paid in connection with the offering. Each Form D filed by Evergreen Homes left the commission expense line blank and, consequently, no commissions were deducted from the gross amount of the offering to arrive at the “adjusted gross proceeds to the issuer.” Mr. Willan maintained then and now that his failure to include the commissions as an expense did not constitute an affirmative misrepresentation and, therefore, could not constitute a violation of
{¶66} Although not emphasized by the State at trial, in addition to Mr. Willan‘s failure to include commissions as an expense to be deducted from the issuer‘s proceeds, each Form D included an affirmative misrepresentation that no commissions would be paid. Section B, Item 4 of each Form D required the issuer to include information about “each person who has been or will be paid or given, directly or indirectly, any commission or similar remuneration for
{¶67} The State also established that the misrepresentation about the payment of commissions was relevant and material to the State‘s review of whether these securities qualified for an exemption from state registration. Form D provides almost an entire page for information about the people who have been or will be paid commissions in connection with the sale of securities in the offering, including the name of their associated broker or dealer. The State presented the testimony of Sheldon Safko, who explained that information about who would receive commissions was relevant and material to the Division‘s review of each Form D because the securities offering would not qualify for a Rule 506 registration exemption if the securities sales involved the payment of commissions to people who were not licensed with the state to sell securities.
{¶68} At the time Mr. Willan filed each Form D to qualify for the registration exemption,
- The issuer makes a notice filing with the division on form D of the securities and exchange commission within fifteen days of the first sale in this state;
- Any commission, discount, or other remuneration for sales of securities in this state is paid or given only to dealers or salespersons licensed under this chapter;
- The issuer pays a filing fee of one hundred dollars to the division; however, no filing fee shall be required to file amendments to the form D of the securities and exchange commission.”
{¶70} Despite Mr. Willan‘s argument to the contrary, the State presented sufficient evidence that he made these misrepresentations with knowledge that they were false. Although Mr. Willan‘s former counsel completed each Form D, he sent the forms to Mr. Willan for him to review and sign. Each Form D was only a few pages long and included little information for Mr. Willan to review. The statement about the commissions would have been noticeable from even a brief review of the forms. Moreover, Mr. Willan signed each Form D directly below a series of statements, representing that he was familiar with the conditions that must be satisfied for the exemption, that he understood that the issuer had the burden of demonstrating that it qualified for the exemption, and that he had “read this notification and knows the contents to be true[.]”
{¶71} Although it is not clear exactly when Mr. Willan began paying Mohler commissions to sell the debt securities, the first Form D to exempt the equity securities from registration was not filed until November 24, 2004. The State presented evidence that, although Mohler initially worked for Evergreen selling homes, he had shifted to securities sales by the end of 2003. Mohler had been selling securities for Evergreen throughout 2004 and, by the end of that year, had earned over $190,000 in commissions. Mohler testified that he first sold debt
Theft Offenses
{¶72} Mr. Willan was convicted of aggravated theft and theft from the elderly under
{¶73} “Deception” has long been defined in
“knowingly deceiving another or causing another to be deceived by any false or misleading representation, by withholding information, by preventing another from acquiring information, or by any other conduct, act, or omission that creates, confirms, or perpetuates a false impression in another, including a false impression as to law, value, state of mind, or other objective or subjective fact.”
{¶75} Most of the State‘s witnesses testified about investing in the debt securities sold by Evergreen Investment. They learned about the investment opportunity primarily from newspaper advertisements and had been drawn to the debt securities because they paid a very high rate of return, in excess of ten percent annually. One witness explained that it was “absolutely” a higher rate of return than many of her other investments. Almost every witness testified that they understood at the time they invested that a high rate of return was associated with a higher risk investment. Each had received a copy of the offering circular, which fully explained that this investment carried many risks. The circular explained that the investment was not federally insured but was directly tied to the success of the Evergreen Companies, which depended on the strength of the housing and mortgage lending markets, both of which were subject to economic fluctuations. As several witnesses explained, however, the housing market was strong at the time they invested and Evergreen Homes was a growing company, so they thought that this was a safe investment.
{¶76} The deception alleged by the State again focused on Mr. Willan‘s false representation in the offering circular that no commissions would be paid in connection with the sale of securities. There was no evidence, however, that any of these investors gave money to Mr. Willan‘s companies due to his false statement about commissions. One by one, the investors
{¶77} Moreover, even if one investor might have been deceived by the misinformation about the payment of commissions, the State failed to present any evidence that Mr. Willan acted with a purpose of depriving the investors of their money. Mr. Willan‘s position throughout these proceedings was that he was conducting a legitimate housing business and sought investors to provide capital to purchase more properties to improve. He maintained that his failure to return the investors’ money was due to the eventual insolvency of his businesses. Despite the State‘s attempts to depict Mr. Willan‘s investment plan as a “Ponzi” scheme, it never presented any evidence to support that characterization. A so-called “Ponzi scheme” was named after Charles Ponzi, who defrauded investors of millions of dollars by convincing them that their money was earning a high rate of return when, in fact, he had not invested their money in anything. See Cunningham v. Brown (1924), 265 U.S. 1, 7-8. His scheme was a total sham because he “made no investments of any kind, so that all the money he had at any time was solely the result of loans by his dupes.” Id. at 8. Nothing in the record before us supports the State‘s allegations that Mr. Willan‘s investment plan was a sham. Investors were told that their money would be
{¶78} There was evidence that a reputable accounting firm had prepared the income tax filings and financial statements for the Evergreen companies and that the companies were financially solvent through the end of 2005. At some point, both companies filed for bankruptcy protection, but the record fails to disclose when that happened or why. The State failed to present evidence to support even an inference that the eventual insolvency of the Evergreen companies, and the investors’ resulting loss of the money they invested, was due to anything other than a downturn in the housing and mortgage markets and the bad publicity that surrounded the sheriff‘s department raid of their offices.
{¶79} Because the State failed to present evidence that Mr. Willan knowingly exerted control over investors’ money by deception with a purpose of depriving them of their money, it failed to present sufficient evidence that Mr. Willan committed the offenses of aggravated theft or theft from the elderly.
Securities Fraud
{¶80} Mr. Willan was convicted of securities fraud under
{¶81} This conviction was based on allegations similar to those underlying the theft convictions, that Mr. Willan defrauded investors by telling them that no commissions would be
Engaging in a Pattern of Corrupt Activity
{¶82} Mr. Willan was convicted of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity under
{¶83} Mr. Willan‘s challenge to this conviction is premised on his challenges to each of the predicate offenses at the first trial, which included false representation in the registration of securities, securities fraud, and the theft offenses. Although we have concluded that there was insufficient evidence to support some of these convictions, there was sufficient evidence to support his convictions under
{¶84} A conviction under
{¶85} The State presented evidence that Mr. Willan, acting through his company Evergreen Homes, made false representations to the Division of Securities so he could exempt Evergreen Homes’ equity securities from state securities registration. In connection with three separate offerings of equity securities, in November 2004, April 2005, and July 2005, Mr. Willan misrepresented to the Division of Securities that his securities were exempt from registration requirements because no commissions would be paid in connection with their sale. Each act was directly related to providing funds for the affairs of his Evergreen companies and the acts were not isolated or so closely connected in time that they could be construed to constitute a single event. The pattern of corrupt activity involved a total of $4 million in securities that Mr. Willan was able to exempt from state registration as a result of the false representation. Therefore, the State presented sufficient evidence to support Mr. Willan‘s conviction of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity.
Mr. Willan‘s Second Trial
{¶86} Following his second jury trial, Mr. Willan was convicted of falsification under
{¶87} Item number 15 of the application asks whether the applicant or any “partners, members, corporate officers, or directors * * * [has] ever been arrested for, charged with or convicted of any violation of any federal, state or local civil or criminal statute[.]” The question explicitly excludes minor traffic violations, but includes no other exclusions or limitations. After item 15 of each form filed by Mr. Willan, the “No” response box was checked. Item 11 of the Schedule 17 attached to each application further asked, “Have you * * * ever pleaded guilty * * * or been found guilty by a judge or jury of any violation of any law of Ohio or elsewhere (excluding motor vehicle traffic laws)?” The response “no” was typed on the line below the question. Schedule 17 was signed and sworn by Mr. Willan and notarized by his former counsel.
{¶88} Each application also included the following attestation that was signed by Mr. Willan:
“I (We) swear that this application and any attachments have been * * * carefully reviewed by me (us) and constitute a complete, truthful, and correct statement of all information required herein. I realize that any false or fraudulent representation * * * will be grounds for a denial of this application * * * and is subject to criminal prosecution under Section 2921.13 of the Ohio Revised Code.”
{¶89} Although the false statements by Mr. Willan led to his convictions of both tampering with records and falsification, he has not challenged the falsification conviction on appeal, nor did he challenge it with a Crim.R. 29 motion at trial. He essentially conceded that the State had presented sufficient evidence to support the falsification conviction, because he made a false statement about his prior conviction on a state application and the State had presented sufficient evidence that he had done so knowingly. See
{¶91} Mr. Willan argues that the State failed to present sufficient evidence that he falsified the second mortgage application with purpose to defraud the Division of Financial Institutions. Proof of a defendant‘s purpose or intent is typically established through circumstantial evidence, as direct evidence will seldom be available. State v. Lott (1990), 51 Ohio St.3d 160, 168.
{¶92} At trial, the parties attached significance to the fact that Mr. Willan obtained a criminal background check, but the results were never received by the Division of Financial Institutions. The background check was also part of the application process to register as a second mortgage lender. The defense attempted to establish that Mr. Willan properly completed the background check and directed that the results be forwarded to the Division, but that the Division apparently never received the results. It was unclear from this evidence whether Mr. Willan had properly directed that the background information be forwarded to the State. Moreover, the fact that he may have completed that component of the second mortgage application process did not change the fact that he made false statements on the application.
{¶93} There was sufficient evidence before the jury to support a reasonable inference that Mr. Willan knowingly gave false information about his prior conviction with a purpose of getting his second mortgage registration approved. The sole purpose of the application was to
Sufficiency Summary
{¶94} In summary, the State failed to present sufficient evidence to support Mr. Willan‘s convictions in the first trial of unlicensed dealer, unregistered second mortgage lender, violating the Small Loans Act, the two counts of false representation in the registration of securities that pertained to the debt securities, securities fraud, aggravated theft, and theft from the elderly. His first assignment of error is sustained to the extent it challenges those convictions. The State did present sufficient evidence to support Mr. Willan‘s convictions in the first trial of false representation in the registration of securities as charged in counts three, four, and six of the indictment and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. It also presented sufficient evidence to support his convictions in the second trial of tampering with records and falsification. Mr. Willan‘s assignment of error as it pertains to those convictions is overruled.
VALIDITY OF SEARCH WARRANT
{¶95} Mr. Willan‘s third assignment of error is that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress all evidence seized in the June 6, 2006, raid of his companies’ offices because the warrant to search each location was based on an affidavit that contained false information.
{¶96} Mr. Willan has failed to demonstrate that the affiant intentionally made any false statements or that he made them with a reckless disregard for their truth. Moreover, he has failed to demonstrate that the isolated statements at issue were material to the overall validity of the warrant in any way. Mr. Willan pointed to a few statements that exaggerated the amount of money he had drawn from his companies and stated that the Division of Securities had initiated the criminal investigation when, in fact, it was the sheriff‘s department. Although Mr. Willan also maintains that the affiant made a false statement that Evergreen Investment was insolvent as of May 2006, there is nothing in the record to establish whether that statement was true or false. Overall, the affidavit includes true statements about the nature of Mr. Willan‘s businesses and his relationship to them, that he was drawing more than his allotted annual salary to the potential detriment of his investors, the interrelationship of the Evergreen companies and that Mr. Willan moved money between the two companies, that Mohler was selling securities and receiving commissions but was not licensed to sell securities, and that Mr. Willan had made misrepresentations to the state and investors about the payment of commissions to Mohler.
{¶98} The warrants to search the West Market Street location did specify only “Evergreen Investment” as the business to be searched, but each warrant clearly indicated that Evergreen Investment was located in the same building as Evergreen Homes and Evergreen Builders, that the sign at the location read “Evergreen Homes,” and one of the warrants included within its scope “any and all areas * * * within the physical structure of 611 W. Market Street occupied by or associated with Evergreen Investment Corporation, Evergreen Homes LLC and Evergreen Builders LLC.” Moreover, each warrant authorized the search and seizure of all documentation exhibiting the names or identifiers of any of these entities or Mr. Willan himself.
{¶99} Mr. Willan has failed to demonstrate that the trial court erred in denying his motion to suppress evidence seized during the search of his offices. The third assignment of error is overruled.
INADMISSIBLE EVIDENCE
{¶100} Mr. Willan‘s fifth assignment of error is that the trial court erred in allowing the State to present evidence in each trial that was irrelevant to the offenses before the court and unduly prejudicial to him. He specifically points to evidence in his first trial about his prior conviction and his unsuccessful attempt to register as a second mortgage lender, as well as evidence in both trials that he withdrew large sums of money from his businesses and spent the funds on extravagant personal items for himself and others.
{¶101} To demonstrate reversible error, Mr. Willan must demonstrate that the evidence was wrongly admitted and that he suffered prejudice as a result. State v. Roberts, 156 Ohio App.3d 352, 2004-Ohio-962, at ¶14. “Prejudice occurs if there is a reasonable possibility that the error might have contributed to the conviction.” State v. Basen (Feb. 16, 1989), 8th Dist. No. 55001, at *6, citing State v. Cowans (1967), 10 Ohio St.2d 96, 105. Although the evidence at issue might have contributed to the jury‘s assessment of the evidence pertaining to some of Mr. Willan‘s convictions, such as the second mortgage registration, securities fraud, and theft offenses, this Court has reversed all of those convictions. Mr. Willan has failed to argue, much less demonstrate, how any of the evidence at issue might have contributed to his convictions of false representation in the registration of securities, engaging in a pattern or corrupt activity, tampering with records, or falsification. Consequently, as he has not demonstrated prejudice, his fifth assignment of error is overruled.
CORRUPT ACTIVITY SENTENCE
{¶102} Mr. Willan‘s sixth assignment of error is that the trial court erred in imposing a ten-year term of incarceration under the former
{¶103} At the time Mr. Willan began his alleged pattern of corrupt activity in November 2004,
“Except when an offender commits a violation of section 2903.01 or 2907.02 of the Revised Code and the penalty imposed for the violation is life imprisonment or commits a violation of section 2903.02 of the Revised Code, if the offender commits a violation of section 2925.03 or 2925.11 of the Revised Code and that section classifies the offender as a major drug offender and requires the imposition of a ten-year prison term on the offender, if the offender commits a felony violation of section 2925.02, 2925.04, 2925.05, 2925.36, 3719.07, 3719.08, 3719.16, 3719.161, 4729.37, or 4729.61, division (C) or (D) of section 3719.172, division (C) of section 4729.51, or division (J) of section 4729.54 of the Revised Code that includes the sale, offer to sell, or possession of a schedule I or II controlled substance, with the exception of marihuana, and the court imposing sentence upon the offender finds that the offender is guilty of a specification of the type described in section 2941.1410 of the Revised Code charging that the offender is a major drug offender, if the court imposing sentence upon an offender for a felony finds that the offender is guilty of corrupt activity with the most serious offense in the pattern of corrupt activity being a felony of the first degree, or if the offender is guilty of an attempted violation of section
2907.02 of the Revised Code and, had the offender completed the violation of section 2907.02 of the Revised Code that was attempted, the offender would have been subject to a sentence of life imprisonment or life imprisonment without parole for the violation of section 2907.02 of the Revised Code, the court shall impose upon the offender for the felony violation a ten-year prison term that cannot be reduced pursuant to section 2929.20 or Chapter 2967. or 5120. of the Revised Code.” (Emphasis added.).
{¶104} Mr. Willan argues that
{¶105} The relevant “corrupt activity” language contained in
{¶106} This Court was able to find only one appellate decision that upheld an application of
{¶107} The Schneider court did not address the legal significance regarding the absence of any reference to
{¶108} Given the apparent ambiguity created by the absence of any reference to convictions under
{¶109} As originally enacted in 1996,
{¶110} We find further guidance by examining the statutory language of each of the enumerated offenses that were referenced in
{¶111} In obvious contrast, the penalty provision for the offense of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity then set forth in
{¶112} Further evidence of the legislature‘s intent in employing the “corrupt activity” language in
{¶113} In contrast to the absence of any statutory cross-references between
{¶114} In enacting the human trafficking amendment to
{¶115} In an attempt to support its position that the mandatory ten-year term of former
“[T]he court shall impose a prison term * * * under * * * section 2929.14 * * * and * * * shall not reduce the term[] pursuant to section 2929.20, section 2967.193, or any other provision of Chapter 2967. or Chapter 5120. of the Revised Code for * * * :
“(10) Corrupt activity in violation of section 2923.32 of the Revised Code when the most serious offense in the pattern of corrupt activity that is the basis of the offense is a felony of the first degree[.]”
{¶116} Although
{¶117} A reasonable construction of
{¶118} Not only does
{¶119} Because the language and legislative history of former
REMAINING ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
{¶120} Mr. Willan‘s remaining assignments of error need not be addressed because they have been rendered moot by our disposition of his first assignment of error. See
CONCLUSION
{¶121} Mr. Willan‘s sixth assignment of error is sustained and his first assignment of error is sustained to the extent that it challenges the sufficiency of the evidence supporting his convictions of unlicensed dealer, unregistered second mortgage lender, violating the Small Loans Act, the two counts of false representation in the registration of securities that pertained to the debt securities, securities fraud, aggravated theft, and theft from the elderly. The remainder of Mr. Willan‘s first assignment of error, as well as his third and fifth assignments of error are overruled. Mr. Willan‘s second and fourth assignments of error were not addressed because they
Judgment affirmed in part, reversed in part, and cause remanded.
There were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
We order that a special mandate issue out of this Court, directing the Court of Common Pleas, County of Summit, State of Ohio, to carry this judgment into execution. A certified copy of this journal entry shall constitute the mandate, pursuant to
Immediately upon the filing hereof, this document shall constitute the journal entry of judgment, and it shall be file stamped by the Clerk of the Court of Appeals at which time the period for review shall begin to run.
Costs taxed equally to both parties.
EVE V. BELFANCE
FOR THE COURT
DICKINSON, P. J.
CONCURS
CONCURS IN PART, AND DISSENTS IN PART, SAYING:
{¶122} I respectfully dissent from the majority‘s disposition of Willan‘s first assignment of error, insofar as it concludes that many of his convictions were not supported by sufficient evidence. I disagree with the majority opinion for the following reasons:
Securities Sales Convictions
{¶123} The majority takes too narrow of an approach in construing the definitions of “dealer” and “salesperson” in
{¶124} Mohler conceded that he had absolutely no training or experience in the area of securities sales or financial investment. He further testified that he did not advise investors about the high risk of these securities, nor did he assure that investors read the explanations of risk set forth in the offering circular. Willan paid him a six-figure income to serve a clerical role by assisting investors in obtaining and completing the necessary paperwork to purchase the debt certificates. Because Willan paid him on a commission basis, however, Mohler was encouraged to bring in a high volume of sales and did, in fact, raise millions of dollars for Willan‘s Evergreen Investment. Although these securities sales funded the growth of Willan‘s business with many investors’ life savings, Mohler had not been trained to advise them or ensure that they read the offering circular, nor were his activities overseen by state regulators.
Second Mortgage Convictions
{¶125} Willan‘s second mortgage business did not fall outside the state‘s licensing requirements for second mortgage lenders simply because he did not actually advance money to the buyers of Evergreen‘s rehabbed homes. Aside from lacking an actual advancement of cash, these transactions had the same effect as second mortgage loans. Willan advanced homes to buyers who had not yet paid the full purchase price; he allowed them to pay the balance due over time, at a significant rate of interest; and he encumbered their homes with a second mortgage. The fact that there was no technical exchange of money was inconsequential to the legal effect of these transactions.
Small Loan Convictions
{¶126} I would not analyze the level of culpability required for a violation of
Securities Registration Convictions
{¶127} I would affirm Willan‘s two convictions of making false representations in the registration of the Evergreen Investment debt securities. Because he was required to file the Evergreen Investment offering circular for approval by the Division of Securities when he registered each offering of debt securities, all representations in the offering circular were material and relevant to the registration process, including his false representation that no commissions would be paid in connection with the sale of the securities.
Theft Convictions
{¶128} Although the state focused on the offering circular‘s misrepresentation about the payment of commissions as one act of deception by Willan, it also focused on the his
{¶129} For these reasons, I believe that all of Willan‘s convictions were supported by sufficient evidence and were not against the manifest weight of the evidence and would overrule his first assignment of error. I concur in the majority‘s disposition of Willan‘s sixth assignment of error and would overrule his remaining assignments of error.
APPEARANCES:
WILLIAM T. WHITAKER and ANDREA L. WHITAKER, Attorneys at Law, for Appellant.
SHERRI BEVAN WALSH, Prosecuting Attorney, and COLLEEN SIMS and RICHARD HOENIGMAN, Assistant Prosecuting Attorneys, for Appellee.
BRAD TAMMARO, Special Prosecuting Attorney, for Appellee.
