UNITED STATES оf America, Plaintiff-Appellant (95-6579; 97-5016),
v.
$515,060.42 IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY, Defendant-Appellee,
Ralph E. White; E.M. Jellinek Center, Inc., Claimants-Appellees.
UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee/Cross-Appellant (96-6175),
v.
$515,060.42 IN UNITED STATES CURRENCY; Virginia Hurst, Defendants,
Ralph E. White; E.M. Jellinek Center, Inc.,
Claimants-Appellants (96-6057)/Cross-Appellees.
Nos. 95-6579, 96-6057, 96-6175 and 97-5016.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Oct. 21, 1997.
Decided May 26, 1998.
Rehearing Denied Aug. 14, 1998.
Robert E. Simpson (argued and briefed), Office of the U.S. Attorney, Knoxville, TN, for United States of America in Nos. 96-6057 and 96-6175.
Robert E. Simpson (argued and briefed), Office of the U.S. Attorney, Carl K. Kirkpatrick, U.S. Atty., Knoxville, TN, for United States of America in Nos. 95-6579 and 97-5016.
Herbert S. Moncier (argued and briefed), Knoxville, TN, for Ralph E. White.
James S. MacDonald (argued and briefed), Dunn, MacDonald & Coleman, Knoxville, TN, for E.M. Jellinek, Inc.
Before: KEITH, BOGGS and COLE, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
COLE, Circuit Judge.
This consolidated appeal arises from a civil forfeiture proceeding in which the district court dismissed the Government's action against certain currency seized as part of a federal investigation of Tennessee bingo game operations based on the Government's failure to file the action within the five-year statute of limitations period. The Government appeals that decision as well as the district court's award of interest on the seized currency. The Government additionally challenges the claimants' standing. The claimants appeal the district court's denial of attorney's fees. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the district court in part and reverse and remand in part.
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS BELOW
This case arises out of a seizure of currency which occurred as part of a federal investigation of bingo game operations in Tennessee. On October 17, 1989, pursuant to a federal search warrant, agents of the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") and the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") searched the residence of Virginia Hurst, a target of the investigation, in Knoxville, Tennessee. Hurst operated bingo games in the Knoxville area for several charitable organizations, which were exempted by statute from Tennessee's gambling laws.1 In the search of her home, agents seized $702,926.81 in United States currency2 and on March 14, 1994, the Government initiated a civil forfeiture action against $515,060.42 of the seized currency.3 In its complaint, the Government alleged that the $515,060.42 in United States currency was used to commit and facilitate the commission of an illegal gambling business in violation of Tennessee and federal law and that the defendant currency was thus subject to forfeiture.
The multi-target federal investigation of Tennessee bingo operations began in the spring of 1988. It produced several indictments, as well as the 1990 convictions in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee of Virginia Hurst, Sam T. Burnett, a former member of the Tennessee legislature, and Eddie E. Schutt. See United States v. Hurst,
Back in February 1985, Hurst began operating bingo gamеs for one of the claimant-appellants, E.M. Jellinek Center, Inc. ("Jellinek" or "the Jellinek Center"), a not-for-profit corporation in existence since 1971 that is involved in the rehabilitation of chemically dependent men. Hurst operated bingo games as often as six nights per week. The other claimant in this case, Ralph Edward White ("White" or "Eddie White"), lived at Hurst's residence and worked for Hurst "calling" bingo games. At the end of the night when bingo games were over, Hurst would take the bingo proceeds home with her. After determining Jellinek's proceeds, Hurst would turn over Jellinek's share of the proceeds (including cash and checks) to Frank Kolinsky, the executive director of the Jellinek Center.
Grand jury testimony was taken in the fall of 1988 as part of the previously mentioned federal investigation. Among those who testified before the grand jury in September 1988 were Kolinsky, who presented to the grand jury five banker boxes containing all of Jellinek's business records related to Hurst's bingo operations; and White, who gave extensive testimony about, inter alia, the Jellinek bingo operations, his role, Hurst's management role, and how the money was handled, including the fact that Hurst consistently took bingo proceeds home and kept them at her residence.4 Kolinsky also testified regarding Hurst's activities in conducting bingo for Jellinek. Kolinsky testified to the grand jury that Hurst was in charge of the entire operation of the bingo games which generated funds for Jellinek. He also answered questions regarding the handling of proceeds, payment of bingo workers, the operator's integrity and financial transactions related to the bingo operation.
FBI and IRS agents interviewed various individuals in 1988, prior to the taking of grand jury testimony. These interviews included Virginia Hurst, Dorothy Varnell and Jim Long, a bingo products supplier and former bingo lobbyist. Long gave wide-ranging information concerning his knowledge of various East Tennessee bingo operations. Long explained that Hurst was one of the most successful bus-trip coordinators for the bingo games at the North Carolina Cherokee Indian reservаtion and that she was part of a plan to secure a state bingo permit for a new East Tennessee bingo operation under the name of a scholarship fund which was, in actuality, a planned "storefront" bingo operation. According to Long, Hurst was responsible for getting the operation up and running and for its management. He also explained her management role in several bingo operations. He additionally stated to investigating agents that during 1985 and 1986, Hurst paid Long $500 per month in cash skimmed from bingo games. Long also related Dorothy Varnell's role in falsifying a state bingo permit application, and Varnell herself also offered that story in her own interview with agents. Hurst was interviewed twice and the interviews covered her management role in several bingo operations. In addition, in August 1988, IRS agents taped (with the consent of one of the parties) at least two conversations between Varnell and Hurst, in which the two discussed their falsification of information on the application for a statе bingo permit and the subpoenaing of grand jury witnesses, including Varnell. Varnell also testified to the grand jury in September 1988 regarding the events surrounding the bingo permit application.
In August 1988, the Government was aware that Hurst's residence was robbed of a sum of money that month. The Government was also aware at the time that the grand jury was convened that Hurst was robbed one evening of $5000 in cash while leaving a bingo site.
At the forfeiture hearing, Karen Bjorkman, an IRS special agent involved in the investigation whose affidavit supported the search warrant, testified that by the fall of 1988, she knew that a number of bingo operators were skimming money from illegitimate bingo games and were keeping at their residences skimmed cash and records that could be used in financial investigations to determine the total amount of income not reported to the IRS. Bjorkman also testified in the forfeiture hearing that she knew in September 1988, as a result of the grand jury testimony that proceeds were being taken to Hurst's residence nightly, that money and records would likely be found at the residence.
Following the Government's filing of a complaint against the defendant currency in March 1994, the claimants in this case, the Jellinek Center and Eddie White, filed verified claims. The district court set the forfeiture action for trial and selected a jury, but prior to the start of trial in early October of 1995, the district court conducted a hearing addressing the claimants' assertion that the statute of limitations barred the Government's action. It concluded that the five-year statute of limitations did indeed bar the action and dismissed the action. The district court reasoned that the Government had discovered the offenses by September 1988 and thus the five-year limitations period had expired.
Following its dismissal on statute of limitations grounds, the district court also decided issues raised on Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) motions by the parties for reconsideration or relief from judgment. The claimants filed a Rule 59(e) motion for "pre-judgment interest" on the seized funds as well as for attorney's fees. The district court granted the interest and denied the attorney's fees. In addition, the district court summarily denied the Government's Rule 59(e) motion to reconsider, in which, along with the issues already mentioned, the Government raised the issue of the claimants' standing. The parties subsequently appealed and cross-appealed to this court. The district court stayed the return of the seized currency pending the Government's appeal to this court.
DISCUSSION
I. The Claimants' Standing
We address first the issue that the Government raised to the district court last: the claimants' standing.5 Following the district court's dismissal of the forfeiture action on statute of limitations grounds, the Government raised, inter alia, the issue of the claimants' standing in a Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) motion. The Government argues that the district court erred in denying its Rule 59(e) motion. We typically review such denials for an abuse of discretion, but where reconsideration of summary judgment was sought, as it was here, we conduct a de novo review. See National Leadburners Health and Welfare Fund v. O.G. Kelley & Co., Inc.,
In order to contest a governmental forfeiture action, claimants must have statutory standing through compliance with Supp. Admiralty and Maritime Claims R. C(6), as well as the Article III standing required for any action brought in federal court. See United States v. Currency $267,961.07,
Colorable claims which confer standing include the most obvious type of interest in seized property, an ownership interest. Id. A property interest less than ownership may also be sufficient to create standing. See, e.g., U.S. v. Currency Totalling $48,318.08,
To contest a forfeiture action, an individual customarily bears the burden of demonstrating an interest in the seized item sufficient to satisfy the court of his standing as a claimant. See, e.g., 526 Liscum Dr.,
In its complaint, the Government alleged that all but approximately $33,000 of the $702,926.81 which was seized was found in the bedroom occupied by Eddie White. In the complaint, the Government also asserted that Virginia Hurst operated unlawful gambling for various organizations, including the Jellinek Center, and that Hurst transferred the cash receipts from the bingo sites to her home, the location of the seized currency, at which point she would forward the cash to, inter alia, Jellinek after deducting her various expenditures. In its answer to the forfeiture complaint in support of its claim, Jellinek asserted that Hurst operated lawful charitable bingo games on its behalf and that at the time of the seizure, $149,075 of Jellinek's money was in the home of Hurst and was seized as part of the $702,926.81. Jellinek denied the unlawfulness of the bingo operations on its behalf. In its trial brief to the district court, the Government repeated the assertions recited above.
While Jellinek's claim did not providе evidence of its ownership interest, in our estimation, Jellinek's claim of ownership, together with its answer to the Government's complaint and the Government's allegations of the nature of Jellinek's involvement with part of the seized currency, are sufficient to establish its standing.7 See, e.g., $191,910.00,
We must also address the basis of White's standing. White was not present at the time of the seizure. However, White had constructive possession of the currency in his own bedroom and such a possessory interest is constitutionally sufficient to confer standing in forfeiture actions. Although he was not in actual possession of the currency at the time it was seized, his constructive possession of it confers standing on him in thе context of the disclosure of facts surrounding the currency. See United States v. $260,242.00 U.S. Currency,
We caution that we are not altering the necessity of factual support for a colorable interest in seized property. White's standing is not without the necessary evidentiary support. As we explained above in regard to Jellinek's standing, White's colorable possessory interest is spelled out in the Government's own complaint and trial brief. While "a naked claim of possession ... is not enough [and][t]here must be some indication that the claimant is in fact a possessor, not a simple, perhaps unknowing custodian," Mercado,
It is certainly true that the claimants could have produced more concrete evidence of ownership or possession of the seized currency. We are nonetheless satisfied that the Government's own allegations of fact, which have gone uncontroverted, introduced sufficient explanation of ownership and possession to confer standing on these claimants to challenge the forfeiture. Our determination is buttressed by the fact that the Government has never alleged that any "straw man" transfers occurred. In fact, the Government does not even suggest any conceivable alternative owners of the currency.8 These facts, while not conclusively establishing the claimants' ownership of the currency, are sufficient to demonstrate facially colorable claims to the property. Accordingly, the claimants had standing to contest the forfeiture.9
II. Statute of Limitations
The civil forfeiture provision of 18 U.S.C. § 1955(d) provides for civil forfeiture of property used in violation of federal statutory provisions prohibiting illegal gambling businesses. Section 1955(d) provides, in pertinent part, that
[a]ny property, including money, used in violation of the provisions of this section may be seized and forfeited to the United States.
The statute also provides a five-year statute of limitations for such forfeiture actions which runs from the time of discovery of the illegal gambling offense.
No suit or action to recover any pecuniary penalty or forfeiture of property accruing under the customs laws shall be instituted unless such suit or action is commenced within five years after the time when the alleged offense was discovered.
19 U.S.C. § 1621 (emphasis added) (made applicable to forfeiture proceedings by 18 U.S.C. § 1955(d)).
The Government argues that the district court erred in dismissing this civil forfeiture action as barred by the five-year statute of limitations. The district court's determination of the timing of the Government's discovery and the concomitant triggering of the statute of limitations under 19 U.S.C. § 1621 was a factual determination. See United States v. 318 So. Third St.,
The statute of limitations at issue has been enforced according to a "known or should have known" standard, United States v. James Daniel Good Property,
As the district court noted, Eddie White testified before the grand jury on September 13, 1988 about the opеration of the bingo games and told the grand jury that Virginia Hurst took home proceeds from the bingo games at the end of the night; he also testified that Hurst had a safe at her house. Frank Kolinsky, the executive director of the Jellinek Center, also testified before the grand jury in September 1988 regarding Hurst's bingo operation for Jellinek and testified that Hurst was in charge of the operation. At that time, he also presented the grand jury with five boxes of financial records of Jellinek's bingo operations. Other witnesses also testified before the grand jury in September 1988 regarding Hurst's operation of the Jellinek bingo games and other games. The Government also had in hand a number of FBI reports of interviews of various people, including an August 1988 interview of Hurst. Finally, in her affidavit supporting the search warrant of Hurst's home, IRS agent Bjorkman stated that she had been investigating illegal bingo operations as part of a statewide investigation for fifteen months, back to at least July of 1988. She also stated that in the course of the investigation she learned that cash was being skimmed from the bingo games and that the bingo operators were taking the skimmed cash and keeping it in their homes. Bjorkman's affidavit specifically referenced Eddie White's September 1988 grand jury testimony. In her testimony before the district court, Bjorkman explained that she knew of the cash skimming by the fall of 1988. Moreover, all of this information was known to the Government by the early fall of 1988.
The Government argues that there was a continuing violation of gambling laws and that the currency seized was from relatively recent bingo operations and therefore the statute of limitations had not run. This argument misapprehends the onset of the running of the statute of limitations. The statute of limitations does not run from the date of a particular violation, but from the date of "discovery " of an offense. See, e.g., United States v. Complex Mach. Works Co.,
The Government also argues that the 1988 FBI and IRS interviews and the grand jury testimony did not establish that an 18 U.S.C. § 1955 violation, which could serve as the basis of the forfeiture, had occurred. The Government contends that while the September 1988 grand jury testimony may have shown that Hurst was operating bingo games in violation of Tennessee law, the grand jury testimony did not establish the other elements of the offense, which were (1) the involvement of five or more persons in the gambling business, and (2) that the gambling business was in continuous operation for over 30 days or had gross revenue exceeding $2000 in a single day. See 18 U.S.C. § 1955. We reject the Government's assertion that it did not have information regarding the other necessary elements of the offense, such that it had not discovered the offense by the fall of 1988. The grand jury was presented with all of Jellinek's business records relating to the bingo operations. Additionally, there was testimony regarding the management and use of workers in the bingo operation. Accordingly, this argument fails. See Shabahang,
The Government also points to a district court decision, $116,000,
Statutes of limitation are statutes of repose representing "a pervasive legislative judgment that it is unjust to fail to put the adversary on notice to defend within a specified period of time and that the right to be free of stale claims in time comes to prevail over the right to prosecute them." United States v. Kubrick,
The Government asserts that the district court erred in awarding interest on the $515,060.42 in seized currency because the Government never waived its immunity against the assessment of pre-judgment interest. The appeal of this issue presents an important question and one that has yеt to be addressed by this circuit. The Government sometimes seizes property for purposes of forfeiture and is later found, for whatever reason, to have no proper claim to the property. When the property is returned to its owner, the question arises, as it did in this case, as to what extent an owner may recover the Government's profit from the use of the seized property.
The Government raises this issue via its assertion of error on the part of the district court in awarding interest on the seized funds in its order granting the claimants' Rule 59(e) motion. As previously mentioned, where reconsideration of a grant of summary judgment was sought, we review the granting of a Rule 59(e) motion de novo. See National Leadburners,
In deciding to award interest, the district court relied on the reasoning of a decision by the Ninth Circuit, United States v. $277,000 U.S. Currency,
While sovereign immunity customarily precludes the Government's liability for interest prior to a judgment, Library of Congress v. Shaw,
In $277,000, the Ninth Circuit addressed the issue of the extent to which an owner of seized property, to which a court has held that the Government has no claim, may recover the Government's profit from the use of the seized property during a time that the court determines that the Government had no right to retain it. The Ninth Circuit decided that seized funds deposited in the United States Treasury "should be considered as constructively earning interest at the government's alternative borrowing rate at all times" until a judgment is rendered. $277,000,
Pursuant to an order by the district court in this case, the seized currency was retained as evidence by the IRS as custodian pending criminal prosecution against Virginia Hurst. Following Hurst's entry of a plea, the IRS deposited the funds with the United Statеs Treasury. A special fund has been established by statute in the United States Treasury for seized assets, forfeited assets and proceeds. See 28 U.S.C. § 524(c); $277,000,
It is not clear from the record whether or not the Treasury account into which these seized funds were deposited was an interest-bearing account. Compare United States v. $133,735.30 Seized From U.S. Bancorp Brokerage Account,
In $277,000, Judge Boggs explained that the act of holding funds in the United States Treasury, even where those funds are held in a non-interest bearing status, financially benefits the federal government. Financial assets in the hands of the Government are a means by which the Government avoids having to borrow equivalent funds. $277,000,
Common sense is particularly illuminating in considering this issue. If the Government seized, for example, a pregnant cow11 and, after the cow gave birth, the Government was found not to be entitled to the cow, it would hardly be fitting that the Government return the cow but not the calf. See Sherwood v. Walker,
If the district court determines that the funds were placed in an interest-bearing account, then there would be no need to treat the funds as "constructively" earning interest because the funds actually earnеd interest. In such a case, the Government satisfies its burden to disgorge the benefit that it has received from the use of a claimant's property by turning over the interest actually earned on the seized funds. See $133,735.30,
The Government also argues that even if the claimants are awarded interest, the award of interest should be calculated beginning March 12, 1993 because until that date, the currency was being retained as evidence against Hurst. We agree. There is no suggestion in this case that the seized funds should have been deposited in the United States Treasury prior to their actual deposit date.12 Accordingly, we affirm the district court's decision to award interest as an aspect of the res to be returned, but only for the time period that the funds were on deposit with the United States Treasury. To the extent that the district court's award of interest was based оn an amount calculated for the time period in which the seized funds were being held as evidence, we reverse the district court and remand this matter for calculation of interest consistent with this opinion.
IV. Attorney's Fees
The claimants contend that the district court abused its discretion by denying them attorney's fees under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 and the Equal Access to Justice Act ("EAJA"), 28 U.S.C. § 2412.
A. Attorney's Fees under the EAJA
The EAJA provides that prevailing parties shall be awarded attorney's fees unless the Government's position was substantially justified or special circumstances make an award unjust. We review the district court's decision not to award attorney's fees under the EAJA for an abuse of discretion. Pierce v. Underwood,
The EAJA provides that:
[e]xcept as otherwise specifically provided by statute, a court shall award to a prevailing party other than the United States fees and other expenses ... incurred by that party in any civil action ... brought by or against the United States ... unless the court finds that the position of the United States was substantially justified or that special circumstances make an award unjust.
28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A). Eligibility for a fee award in a civil action thus requires that (1) the claimant was a "prevailing party"; (2) the Government's position was not "substantially justified"; and (3) no special circumstances make an award unjust. Commissioner, INS v. Jean,
In elaborating on the meaning of "substantially justified" under the EAJA, we have explained that
[t]he government's position under section 2412(d)(1)(A) is "substantially justified" if it is "justified in substance or in the main"--that is, justified to a degree that could satisfy a reasonable person ... [A] position can be justified even though it is not correct, and we believe it can be substantially (i.e. for the most part) justified if a reasonable person could think it correct, that is, if it has a reasonable basis in law and fact.
United States v. Real Property Located at 2323 Charms Road,
B. Attorney's Fees under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11
The claimants also assert that the district court erred in denying them attorney's fees under Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. We review a district court's denial of an award of attorney's fees under Rule 11 for an abuse of discretion. Davis v. Crush,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court in part and REVERSE and REMAND in part to the district court.
Notes
Early in 1989 the Tennessee Supreme Court struck down this exemption statute, see Secretary of State v. St. Augustine Church,
With the exception of approximately $33,000, all of the currency was found in a bedroom occupied by Eddie White
While $702,926.81 in United States currency was seized in the 1989 search of Virginia Hurst's home, approximately $187,864.89 of the money was later returned to Hurst. The remaining seized currency, $515,060.42, is the defendant in the underlying forfeiture action
Hurst was called but did not testify
The Government did raise the issue in a June 5, 1995 trial brief. Hоwever, it never raised the issue of standing again until after the district court dismissed the case on limitations grounds on October 10, 1995. The Government then directly raised the issue for resolution in its Rule 59(e) motion. In denying the motion, the district court did not specifically address the issue. See J.A. 147
Similarly, bare legal title, in the absence of assertions of dominion, control or some other indicia of ownership of or interest in the seized property, is insufficient to confer standing to challenge a forfeiture. See 526 Liscum Dr.,
Because Jellinek asserts its own ownership interest in the money and not as a bailee asserting the ownership interest of a bailor, we need not consider the situation where a claimant raises only the interests of another. See $191,910.00,
In fact, in the forfeiture complaint the Government asserted that Virginia Hurst disclaimed any interest in the currency seized from her home in her plea agreement in the Eastern District of Tennessee and stated that she would make no further claim on such property. Hurst had claimed that $198,864.89 belonged to her and after an amount owed to the IRS was deducted, the remaining sum was returned to her
We note that we have been confronted only with the issue of standing. Although the forfeiture action has been dismissed, the district court retains the authority to make an appropriate disposition of the property. "It is well established that a federal court may consider collateral issues after an action is no longer pending." Cooter & Gell v. Hartmarx Corp.,
Hurst was convicted of federal gambling offenses in 1990 and again in March 1993; however, the Government did not file the underlying forfeiture action against the currency seized from her hоme until March 1994
We do not claim any originality in our allusion. We rely on the same bovine cited by Judge Boggs in his explication of this issue in $277,000
We note that the claimants have not asserted any wrongdoing or inappropriate conduct on the part of the Government in holding the currency as evidence pending Virginia Hurst's prosecution. See 1992 Annual Report of the Dep't of Justice Asset Forfeiture Program 87 (FY 1992 Fin. Statement, n. 5) (describing the fund for assets before forfeiture, established pursuant to § 524(c)(5), as "a holding account for non-evidentiary cash") (emphasis added) (cited in $277,000,
