UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. A. WILLIAM ERPENBECK, JR. and MICHAEL L. BAKER
No. 11-3530
United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
June 21, 2012
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. File Name: 12a0190p.06. Argued: June 7, 2012.
Before: SUTTON, McKEAGUE and RIPPLE*, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Debra S. Pleatman, ZIEGLER & SCHNEIDER, P.S.C., Covington, Kentucky, for Appellant. Deborah D. Grimes, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Debra S. Pleatman, ZIEGLER & SCHNEIDER, P.S.C., Covington, Kentucky, for Appellant. Deborah D. Grimes, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellee.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. In a fact pattern befitting a John Grisham novel, FBI agents found a cooler filled with more than $250,000 in cash buried at a private golf course outside Cincinnati. The money belonged to A. William Erpenbeck, Jr., a convicted fraudster then serving a 300-month sentence in federal prison. What came next is a tug-of-war over who gets the money: the government, which wants a criminal forfeiture of the cash, or the trustee of Erpenbeck‘s bankruptcy estate, who wants to distribute the cash to Erpenbeck‘s creditors. The district court sided with the government, but because the government did not provide the trustee with sufficient notice of the forfeiture proceeding, depriving him of the chance to assert his claim, we vacate the final order of forfeiture and remand.
I.
As president of the Erpenbeck Development Company, once one of the largest residential developers in the Cincinnati area, Erpenbeck orchestrated a fraud that bilked nearly $34 million from home buyers and banks between 1999 and 2002. United States v. Erpbenbeck, 532 F.3d 423, 426–30 (6th Cir. 2008). Erpenbeck pled guilty to federal bank-fraud charges in April 2003 and received a 300-month prison sentence. Id. at 428-30. The district court also ordered him to forfeit the proceeds of the fraud: $33,935,878.02. See
Six years later, the FBI learned that, before he went to prison, Erpenbeck gave a friend more than $250,000 in cash and asked him to hold the money until his release. The friend put the cash in a cooler and buried it near the green of the third hole (a 366-yard par four) at Summit Hills Country Club in Crestview Hills, Kentucky. FBI agents unearthed the cooler on October 1, 2009, and the government sought forfeiture of the cash.
The trustee filed a motion to stay the final order of forfeiture in November 2010, contending that the cash belonged to the bankruptcy estate. The district court denied the motion, holding that the trustee waived his claim because he did not file a timely petition asserting his interest.
II.
A.
To obtain title to property through criminal forfeiture, the government must give third parties a chance to assert competing interests in the property. See United States v. Huntington Nat‘l Bank, 574 F.3d 329, 330 (6th Cir. 2009). After a district court enters a preliminary order of forfeiture, federal law requires the government to provide notice of the proceedings, giving interested parties thirty days to file a petition asserting their claims.
Acknowledging he did not file a petition within thirty days of online publication of the notice, the trustee maintains that the district court could not extinguish his interest
Did the government‘s notice suffice? More to the point, was notice by publication sufficient or was direct notice to the trustee required? That depends on the interrelation of two subsections of the criminal forfeiture statute:
The first of these subsections, § 853(j), incorporates the civil forfeiture statute. It says: “Except to the extent that they are inconsistent with the provisions of this section, the provisions of section 881(d) of this title shall apply to a criminal forfeiture under this section.”
That leads to the other relevant subsection. One potential inconsistency with this direct-notice requirement appears in § 853(n)(1), which says:
Following the entry of an order of forfeiture under this section, the United States shall publish notice of the order and of its intent to dispose of the property in such manner as the Attorney General may direct. The Government may also, to the extent practicable, provide direct written notice to any person known to have alleged an interest in the property that is the subject of the order of forfeiture as a substitute for published notice as to those persons so notified.
Buttressing this conclusion is the constitutional-avoidance canon. If a statute is susceptible of “two plausible . . . constructions,” one of which “would raise a multitude of constitutional problems, the other should prevail.” Clark v. Martinez, 543 U.S. 371, 380–81 (2005). Imagine if the statute did not require direct notice to parties whom the government knows, or reasonably should know, have an interest in the forfeitable property. That would raise serious, likely devastating, constitutional objections. Due process requires the government to provide “notice reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the pendency of” a legal action that will determine their rights to property, and to “afford them an opportunity to present their objections.” Mullane v. Central Hanover Bank & Trust Co., 339 U.S. 306, 314 (1950). When the government knows not whom the forfeiture affects, constructive notice by publication suffices. Id. at 317. But that is not true when the government knows or reasonably should know whom to notify. As to them, the government must attempt to provide direct notice of the proceeding. Id. at 318–19; see also Mennonite Bd. of Missions v. Adams, 462 U.S. 791, 797–98 (1983) (requiring government to provide direct notice to mortgage holder who has a publicly recorded interest before selling property to satisfy tax lien).
B.
Does the trustee fall within the class of third parties to whom the government owes direct notice? In other words, in the words of the statute, does he “appear[] to have an interest in the seized article”?
The short answer is yes. Under the Bankruptcy Code, when Erpenbeck‘s creditors filed an involuntary bankruptcy petition against him in July 2002, all of his property, “wherever located and by whomever held,” became part of the bankruptcy estate.
The long answer also is yes, though it requires a few additional answers to the government‘s contrary position. As the government sees it, the cash did not belong to Erpenbeck in July 2002 because, under the forfeiture statute‘s relation-back clause,
But the government did not seek forfeiture of the cash as tainted property. It argued (and the district court found) that the cash was “substitute property”—untainted property that the government may seize to satisfy a forfeiture judgment if the tainted property is unavailable.
It does not. The relation-back clause extends only to tainted property—“property described in subsection (a).”
The Fourth Circuit, we acknowledge, has gone the other way. Applying the statutory exhortation that “[t]he provisions of this section shall be liberally construed to effectuate its remedial purposes,”
Even if the relation-back clause does not apply to substitute property, the government persists, the trustee still lacks a plausible claim to the cash (and thus has no right to direct notice) because his interest is not one the forfeiture statute allows a third party to assert in an ancillary proceeding. The statute allows a third party to assert two kinds of claims: (1) that he “is a bona fide purchaser for value,” or (2) that he had “a legal right, title, or interest in the property . . . at the time of the commission of the acts which gave rise to the forfeiture of the property under this section.”
C.
The government offers several explanations for not providing direct notice to the trustee. It claims it had no reason to believe the bankruptcy case was still open in 2009, seven years after the filing of the bankruptcy petition. But a quick check of the docket would have shown the case remained open, surely the kind of “reasonably diligent effort[]” due process requires the government to undertake in identifying potential third-party claimants. Tulsa Prof‘l Collection Servs., Inc. v. Pope, 485 U.S. 478, 491 (1988). Nor was the trustee a mysterious claimant lurking in the shadows. He had previously objected to the forfeiture of other Erpenbeck assets. On this record, the trustee‘s interest in the cash was not merely “conjectural” but one that, “in due course of business,” should have “come to [the government‘s] knowledge.” Mullane, 339 U.S. at 317.
The government also assumed the trustee would receive notice of the preliminary order of forfeiture through the district court‘s case management and electronic case filing (“CM/ECF”) system because the trustee had previously filed a motion in Erpenbeck‘s criminal case objecting to the forfeiture of other property. But the government, not the trustee, bears the burden of establishing compliance with statutory notice requirements, see United States v. Robinson, 78 F.3d 172, 173, 175 (5th Cir. 1996); cf. Grable & Sons Metal Prods., Inc. v. Darue Eng‘g & Mfg., 377 F.3d 592, 597 (6th Cir. 2004), aff‘d on other grounds, 545 U.S. 308 (2005), and the government offers no evidence that reliance on CM/ECF in this instance to deliver notice was “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise [the trustee] of the pendency of” the forfeiture proceeding.
All of this is of no moment, the government adds, because the trustee obtained actual notice of the forfeiture action anyway. In pushing this point, the government invokes the district court‘s statement that the trustee “apparently concedes, albeit tacitly, that he did receive notice of the Court‘s order preliminarily forfeiting the contents of the cooler.” R. 154 at 5. The district court reached this conclusion based on a single sentence in the trustee‘s motion: “Most notably, the discussions in which the Trustee asserted his claim to the Property were held after the United States had filed its preliminary forfeiture motion in November of 2009 but before it filed its final order in June of 2010.” Id. (quoting R. 151 at 4). This statement was not a concession, tacit or otherwise, that the trustee knew about the forfeiture. It refers to a discussion that took place in March 2010 in which the trustee told a government attorney about the estate‘s interest in the cash. The statement shows that the trustee told the government about the estate‘s interest before the district court entered the final order of forfeiture, not that the trustee knew about the forfeiture proceeding at that time.
The government‘s efforts to explain away its failure to notify the trustee overlook a simple reality: neither the forfeiture statute nor the Due Process Clause demands that the government undertake “heroic efforts” to provide the required notice; mailing the trustee a certified letter will suffice. See Dusenbery v. United States, 534 U.S. 161, 170, 172–73 (2002). Even though the trustee‘s interest in the cash was far from a mystery, the government did not take this modest step.
D.
That leaves the question of remedy. The most sensible approach, and the one we adopt here, is to remand the case to the district court with instructions to accept a third-party petition from the trustee and to hold an ancillary proceeding under
One other thing. The trustee submits there is no need to go through the ancillary proceeding because the cash belonged to the bankruptcy estate from the get-go and therefore is not subject to forfeiture at all. As the trustee sees it, the cash became property of the bankruptcy estate upon the filing of the bankruptcy petition in July 2002, see
The Bankruptcy Code‘s automatic-stay provision does not mandate a different result. Filing a bankruptcy petition usually “operates as a stay, applicable to all entities,” of a variety of actions, including “any act to obtain possession of property of the estate.”
III.
For these reasons, we vacate the final order of forfeiture and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
