UNITED STATES of America, Appellee,
v.
AMREP CORPORATION, Rio Rancho Estates, Inc., ATC Realty
Corporation, Howard W. Friedman, Chester Carity,
Henry L. Hoffman, Daniel Friedman,
Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 1331-1337, Dockets 77-1150 to 77-1156.
United States Court of Appeals,
Second Circuit.
Argued June 22, 1977.
Decided Aug. 8, 1977.
Stanley S. Arkin, Mark S. Arisohn, Lee Cross, Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison, Arthur L. Liman, Robert S. Smith, New York City, Robert Abrahams, New York City, of counsel, for defendants-appellants Amrep Corp., Rio Rancho Estates, Inc., ATC Realty Corp., Howard W. Friedman and Henry L. Hoffman.
Peter E. Fleming, Jr., New York City (Curtis, Mallet-Prevost, Colt & Mosle, John E. Sprizzo, Eliot Lauer, New York City, of counsel), for defendants-appellants Chester Carity and Daniel Friedman.
Patricia M. Hynes, Asst. U. S. Atty., New York City (Robert B. Fiske, Jr., U. S. Atty., for the Southern District of New York, Alan R. Kaufman, Michael S. Devorkin, Audrey Strauss, Robert J. Jossen, Asst. U. S. Attys., John F. Kaley, Special Asst. U. S. Atty., New York City, of counsel), for appellee.
Before MULLIGAN, GURFEIN and VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judges.
VAN GRAAFEILAND, Circuit Judge:
These are appeals from judgments convicting defendants on 20 counts of mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341, and on 5 counts of interstate land sale fraud, 15 U.S.C. § 1703(a), following a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. We affirm.
All of the counts were based upon sales from a 91,000 acre tract of land known as the Rio Rancho Estates, located in Sandoval County, New Mexico, some 15 to 20 miles northwest of downtown Albuquerque. The land is mainly rolling hills with sparse growths of sagebrush and native grasses in sandy soil. Title was acquired by Rio Rancho Estates, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of AMREP1 in several installments, 54,000 acres in 1961 and the balance between 1969 and 1971.
Rio Rancho had the property staked out into 86,000 lots; and, by 1976, over 77,000 of them had been sold, mostly to people living outside of New Mexico. However, as of 1976, only 1,700 lots on this 142 square mile tract were occupied by homes. Moreover, most of the vacant lots were on unpaved roads and without utilities of any sort. Nevertheless, although the entire tract had been purchased for $17,800,000, the 77,000 lots were sold for a total of approximately $170,000,000.
It was the government's contention that the volume of sales and the disparity between the purchase price and selling price resulted in large measure from two fraudulent sales representations made by appellants. The first of these was that Albuquerque was "bursting at the seams" with people and was so situated geographically that it could grow only to the northwest through Rio Rancho. The second was that the purchase of a Rio Rancho lot would be a safe and profitable investment. The issues created by these two contentions were submitted to the jury, which convicted appellants on all counts. The evidence introduced during the ten-week trial, viewed in the light most favorable to the government, United States v. Goldberg,
Most of the sales after 1964 resulted from slickly organized and carefully scripted promotional dinners and tours. The scripts, which all sales representatives were required to follow, emphasized that Albuquerque, "one of the fastest growing cities" in the country, had "one unique, serious problem." It was surrounded on three sides by mountains or government land so that its future growth could go in one direction only, i. e., "in the very path where Rio Rancho Estates is located." Rio Rancho, one of the sales pitches said, was "where the City must grow to, grow into, grow out of."
The government introduced substantial evidence, which the jury could believe, that these representations were untrue and known by the defendants to be untrue. For example, a planning report published by Albuquerque in 1964 stated:
Albuquerque has an abundance of vacant land available for urban development. Even the most optimistic growth projections would not utilize this land within the current century.
Moreover, a private consulting firm which did a market survey for defendants in 1965 arrived at the same conclusion. Its report stated:
Despite the expected doubling of Albuquerque's population over the next 20 years to over 600,000 residents, ample undeveloped suburban land exists more proximate to the City and its desirable parts than Rio Rancho's land, such that only a small and selective local market penetration by Rio Rancho is likely over the 20 year period from 1966 to 1985.
Witnesses produced by the government testified that the greatest growth during the 15 years in which the Rio Rancho property was being promoted and sold was in the northeast section of Albuquerque and that there was still land in that area available for residential development. In short, the government's proof was sufficient to establish that Albuquerque was not required to expand to Rio Rancho and it had not done so.
Declarations of opinion as to future events which the declarant does not in fact hold may be found by a jury to be fraudulent. United States v. Grayson,
Because of Albuquerque's failure to expand to Rio Rancho and also because of the manner in which Rio Rancho itself was developed,3 there was an extremely limited resale market for Rio Rancho lots. The jury could conclude from this that the purchase of these lots as a profitable investment was unwise and unwarranted. The jury could also find that the purchasers whom the government produced as witnesses were induced to buy by defendants' representations that they would be making a sound and profitable investment. The purchasers were told that "investment" was "truly the key, the theme" to defendants' program, that it was a "land investment program" in which they could make a great deal of money, up to 25% a year on their investment. Indeed, using as illustrations sales from dissimilar property in Albuquerque itself and applying principles of financial leverage thereto, defendants' representatives showed how the purchasers could realize annual gains of 150% or more on the amount which they invested.
It was for the jury to weigh these programmed remarks against a reservation contained in the printed offering statement that "resale for a profit might be difficult for a number of years," in determining whether there existed a scheme or artifice to defraud. United States v. Press,
The bona fides which appellants assert is demonstrated by their program permitting cash refunds and the exchange of unimproved for improved property was also for the triers of fact. Lustiger v. United States,
The efforts of the individual defendants to disassociate themselves from the acts of the corporation and its agents were rejected by the jury, and the jury was justified in so doing. We note that the corporate defendants and the individual defendants Howard W. Friedman and Henry L. Hoffman were represented originally by the same firm of attorneys. When the question of a possible conflict was raised by the government, counsel assured the court that there was no conflict between the corporation and the individuals.4 The evidence subsequently offered by the government did, in fact, show that the individual defendants were fully aware of the corporate activities found to be fraudulent and participated actively therein.
In his opening remarks to the jury, counsel for defendants Howard W. Friedman and Henry L. Hoffman forecast the proof which would follow by referring to the "representations which (his clients) permitted to be made by the company in its literature and by their salesmen" and told the jury that the issue was "were my clients justified in permitting that to be said." Substantial evidence was introduced to establish that all of the defendants were cognizant of the type of representations being made and both permitted and encouraged them.
The admissibility of evidence in a mail fraud scheme involving two or more persons is determined similarly to that in a conspiracy. "The acts and declarations of each party to the scheme made in furtherance or execution thereof are admissible against all." United States v. Grow,
Of course, participation by a corporation in a scheme to defraud does not ipso facto make participants of its officers. Prerequisite to such a finding is proof that the officers were "conscious promoters" of the illicit scheme. United States v. Dilliard,
Even if the representations of the unindicted salesmen, standing alone, were not conclusive, they were admissible; and, together with the writings, literature and lulling letters sent under the defendants' directions, they were sufficient to make a question of fact as to the defendants' bad faith and fraudulent intent. Harris v. United States,
Evidence that defendants had made the filings required by Art. 9-A of the New York Real Property Law § 337 et seq., did not establish that defendants' conduct had been approved as legal in that State. Section 337-b(5) specifically so provides. Indeed, if defendants were engaged in a fraudulent course of conduct, whether or not that conduct was approved by a state administrative agency may be immaterial on the issue of legality. United States v. Sylvanus,
Appellants' able and resourceful counsel make numerous assertions of error in the trial court's rulings and charge which merit little additional discussion.
Appellants contend that, in proving a scheme to defraud by means of several misrepresentations, every misrepresentation charged in the indictment must be proved and the failure to prove one must result in a retrial. "(Appellants) confuse the scheme to defraud, which is the gist of the offense, with the means adopted to effectuate that scheme." Simons v. United States,
The government having established that tape recordings of a sales dinner and a sales meeting were what it claimed them to be, see United States v. Natale,
Our review of the record satisfies us that the district judge allowed the defendants the greatest of leeway in challenging the government's case. His rulings were made in a manner which vigorously and consistently protected appellants' rights, and he gave defense counsel extremely wide latitude in their cross-examination of the government's witnesses. Appellants received a fair trial. The factual determination of their guilt was for the jury. United States v. Sears,
Judgments of conviction are affirmed.
Notes
Appellant ATC Realty Corporation was also a wholly owned subsidiary of AMREP and handled sales in the New York area. Appellant Howard W. Friedman was president of both AMREP and Rio Rancho Estates and a director of ATC. Chester Carity was executive vice president of AMREP and Rio Rancho Estates and president of ATC. Henry Hoffman was senior vice president of AMREP and Rio Rancho Estates until 1974 and thereafter a director. He also served as an officer and director of ATC. Daniel Friedman was senior vice president of sales and a director of AMREP and a vice president of Rio Rancho
References made herein to the more than 7,000 pages of trial testimony are, of necessity, summary in nature
Defendants themselves played a substantial role in destroying the resale market, when they purchased 37,000 additional acres of land and put them on the market
Separate counsel were substituted for the corporate defendants shortly before selection of the jury began
The government established by direct testimony that there were 690 multiple listings of Rio Rancho property between 1971 and 1973 and only 20 sales. AMREP's filing with the SEC also attested to the fact that there was no resale market, as did the letters which it sent to inquiring property owners
