UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, versus BABAR JAVED BUTT, Defendant, and HUMA BUTT; TAJUDDIN SALAHUDDIN, Appellants.
No. 18-20131
United States Court of Appeals, Fifth Circuit
July 15, 2019
Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit FILED July 15, 2019 Lyle W. Cayce Clerk
Before HIGGINBOTHAM, SMITH, and SOUTHWICK, Circuit Judges.
Huma Butt (“Huma“) and Tajuddin Salahuddin, pro se, asserted interests in a convicted criminal defendant‘s property that was subject to criminal forfeiture and criminal restitution. The district court denied
I.
Babar Javed Butt (“Babar“) was convicted of mail fraud. During the criminal investigation, the government seized from Babar $91,267 (the “cash“) and 452 electronic devices (the “devices“) consisting of tablets, phones, and computers. The cash was transferred to the U.S. Marshals Service. The district court sentenced Babar, in part, to $287,679 in restitution and ordered him to forfeit $287,679. The court also granted the government‘s motions to forfeit 360 of the devices to the United States in partial satisfaction of the forfeiture order and to turn over the cash in partial satisfaction of Babar‘s restitution debt.
Huma and Salahuddin, not parties to the criminal proceeding, asserted interests in the cash and electronic devices, filing individual pro se motions seeking ancillary hearings and the return of property. Huma, Babar‘s sister, claimed that she had a “priority ownership” in and was a “bonafide purchaser” of the cash and devices because she had paid off a debt that Babar owed to a third party for lending him money to purchase electronic devices. The district court denied her motion because she was not a party to the criminal proceeding.
Salahuddin contended that he was a secured creditor of Babar‘s and that he possessed a lien superior to that of the United States on the cash and devices because he had executed a Collateralized Inventory Loan with Babar that placed that property “under lien.” The court also denied Salahuddin‘s motion because, taking his allegations as true, he was “at best” “an unsecured creditor” of the cash and devices, so “the United States ha[d] a superior claim to the assets.”
On appeal, Huma and Salahuddin challenge the denial of their motions asserting their interests in the cash and devices and seeking ancillary hearings. Huma contends that she has a “superior right because she is a bonafide lien holder” of the cash and devices for having paid Babar‘s debt to the third party. Salahuddin maintains that the Collateralized Inventory Loan establishes him as Babar‘s secured creditor with a lien superior to that of the United States on the cash and devices.
II.
A third party “asserting a legal interest in property which has been ordered forfeited” may “petition the court for a hearing to adjudicate the validity of his alleged interest in the property.”
Consequently, this court applies the standard of review under
III.
As an initial matter, Huma‘s and Salahuddin‘s appeals are timely because the deadline for a civil notice of appeal applies. Ancillary proceedings are civil in nature. See Corpus, 491 F.3d at 208. Where multiple parties file petitions in the same case asserting property interests, an order dismissing a petition for an ancillary proceeding is not appealable until the district court has ruled on all the petitions “unless the court determines that there is no just reason for delay.”
The district court denied Huma‘s motions to reconsider its denial of her
petition for an ancillary hearing on February 2, 2018, and denied Salahuddin‘s motion for an ancillary hearing on February 12. Huma and Salahuddin filed their notices of appeal 11 days (February 23) and 15 days (February 27), respectively, after the denial of Salahuddin‘s petition. Thus, both appeals were timely under the civil deadline. See
IV.
A.
Huma challenges the denial of her petition for an ancillary hearing, asserting that the court erroneously refused to consider
Huma maintains that these facts either “establish[ed] a lien” in her favor on the cash and devices or made her a “bonafide purchaser” of a right to them. She further asserts that “at no point” did she agree to be an unsecured creditor of Babar‘s. Huma‘s claims fail. Her petition for an ancillary hearing does not state a claim under
At all relevant times. the cash and devices were located in Texas. Therefore, whether Huma held a valid security interest in that property is governed by Texas law.
Huma has not demonstrated the existence of the necessary written security agreement to establish her as a secured creditor with a lien on the cash or devices. She did not attach a written, signed agreement to her petition for an ancillary hearing. Her petition asserted only an unsecured interest in the cash and devices, so she is merely an unsecured creditor.
Huma‘s status as an unsecured creditor determines her claims. Unsecured creditors generally lack standing to contest forfeiture of their debtor‘s property. See United States v. Reckmeyer, 836 F.2d 200, 205–06 (4th Cir. 1987). To prevail in a § 853(n) ancillary proceeding, a third-party petitioner must possess, or be a bona fide purchaser for value of, “a legal interest in property which has been ordered forfeited to the United States.”
For the same reasons that Huma cannot establish a secured interest in the specific cash or devices, she also cannot demonstrate that she is a “bona fide purchaser for value” of that property. She alleges no facts to support that she was a bona fide purchaser of the specific seized property. Accordingly, the district court properly rejected Huma‘s petition for an ancillary hearing.
B.
Salahuddin likewise challenges the denial of his petition for an ancillary hearing, averring that the court “erred in determining that [he] is an unsecured creditor.” In his petition, Salahuddin claims that he and Babar executed a Collateralized Inventory Loan on August 1, 2014, which he attached as supporting evidence. The loan agreement provides that Salahuddin will lend Babar up to $400,000 “for the purchase of INVENTORY i.e. (i) Cell phones, (ii) IPads, (iii) Mac Books (iv) Computers and (v) other electronic devices.” It also states that Babar “grants a first priority lien on, and security interest in and to all of” that inventory, “whether now owned or hereafter
Salahuddin asserts on these facts that “any funds or inventory . . . seized from . . . Babar . . . [is] under lien,” so he is a secured creditor with a priority lien on the cash and devices. Though Salahuddin‘s claims regarding the cash do not establish that he has an interest in that property superior to that of the United States, he has alleged sufficient facts at this stage to establish a facially valid third-party claim to the devices. He is entitled to an ancillary proceeding regarding his interest therein.
First, Salahuddin repeatedly invokes forfeiture terms and procedures in maintaining that he has an interest in the cash. The cash, however, was not forfeited. After being seized from Babar, it was held in the possession of the U.S. Marshals Service and then ordered to be turned over and applied to Babar‘s restitution debt under the United States’ restitution lien that arose under
Nevertheless, second, Salahuddin has adequately alleged a secured interest in the devices. His claims in his petition, as supported by the attached Collateralized Inventory Loan, support that he has a security interest in those devices because the loan agreement (1) exchanged value, (2) indicated that Babar had rights in the electronic devices he was purchasing, and (3) described, in a written agreement purporting to bear Babar‘s signature, the property serving as collateral. See
We therefore VACATE the denial of Salahuddin‘s petition for an ancillary hearing as to the devices and REMAND for further proceedings as needed. In all other respects, the judgment is AFFIRMED. We express no limit on what actions the district court can take on remand or on the ultimate merits of any issue.
JERRY E. SMITH
UNITED STATES CIRCUIT JUDGE
