Order
I. INTRODUCTION
In this civil action brought by the Plaintiff, the United States of America, against the Defendant, F. Lee Bailey (hereinafter, “Bailey”), Bailey has filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the Court’s Grant of Summary Judgment in Favor of the Government in its Order of January 24, 2003 (Doc. No. 82, filed April 29, 2003), and a Motion Under Rule 29(b) to Set Aside Punitive Damage Jury Verdict as Unwarranted by the Evidence, and the Circumstances of the Case (Doc. No. 84, filed April 29, 2003). The Plaintiff, the United States of America (hereinafter, “the United States” or “the Government”), responded (Doc. No. 93) on May 20, 2003. The motions were heard on June 18, 2003 (Doc. No. 96). The issue now before this Court is: can the relation back doctrine, a legal fiction created by federal statutory law,
II. BACKGROUND
Following a Special Verdict of Forfeiture, forfeiting a $2 million fee (hereinafter, “the Legal Trust Fund”) that the McCorkles transferred to Bailey for their legal defense in USA v. McCorkle, et al, Bailey filed a third-party petition claiming superior title in the Legal Trust Fund. 1 United States District Judge Patricia C. Fawsett treated Bailey’s petition as a “claim” pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(n)(6)(B). That section provides that if a court determines a petitioner has established by a preponderance of evidence that he is a “bona fide purchaser for value of the right, title, or interest in the property and was at the time of purchase reasonably without cause to believe that the property was subject to forfeiture ... the court shall amend the order of forfeiture in accordance with its determination.” 2 Judge Fawsett referred the matter to Magistrate Judge James G. Glazebrook for a hearing and for issuance of a Report and Recommendation. 3
From October 18-29, 1999, Judge Glaze-brook conducted an evidentiary hearing on Bailey’s claim to the Legal Trust Fund. 4 Thereafter, in a sixty-seven page Report and Recommendation (R & R), Judge Gla-zebrook found in favor of the Government, determining that Bailey failed to establish that he had a legal right, title, or interest in the Legal Trust Fund that rendered the forfeiture invalid. 5
On June 29, 2000, Judge Fawsett adopted virtually all of Judge Glazebrook’s R & R, ruling that pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(c)
6
, the Government “holds ‘clear title’ to the Fund, which is the ‘property that is the subject of the order of forfeiture,’ which ‘relates back’ to the date that the Fund was laundered in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1956
&
1957.”
7
However, Judge Fawsett found that since Bailey “caused the ‘property that is the subject of the order of forfeiture’ to be unavailable”
8
... she did not have the power to order Bailey to “forfeit property other than the property which is expressly subject to forfeiture under sections 853(a), (c), and (p).”
9
Consequently, Judge Fawsett concluded that the Government “may do the following: (1) seek forfeiture of ‘substitute assets’ of the defendant; (2) seek forfeiture of property in the hands of a third party which is traceable to the forfeited party; and (3) pursue a civil action against
On July 24, 2001, the Government filed the instant action against Bailey alleging causes of action for conversion (Count I) and civil theft (Count II). 11 The count alleging conversion included a claim for punitive damages. 12 The count alleging civil theft sought treble damages pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 772.11(1). 13
In order to establish a claim for conversion of money under Florida law, a plaintiff must demonstrate, by a preponderance of the evidence: (1) specific and identifiable money; (2) possession or an immediate right to possess that money; (3) an unauthorized act which deprives plaintiff of that money; and (4) a demand for return of the money and a refusal to do so.
See Navid v. Uiterwyk Corp.,
In order to establish a claim of civil theft, a plaintiff must demonstrate, by clear and convincing evidence, that the defendant knowingly obtained or used the plaintiffs property with the intent to, either temporarily or permanently deprive the plaintiff of a right to the property or a benefit therefrom, or alternatively, with the intent to appropriate the property to his own use or to the use of any person not entitled thereto. See
Anthony Distribs., Inc. v. Miller Brewing Co.,
Although Bailey received only $777,545.71 from the Legal Trust Fund (the remainder — $1,222,454.29—went to other lawyers on the MeCorkle defense team), the Government’s action for conversion and civil theft sought the entire $2,000,000 from Bailey. 14
On July 29, 2002, the Government moved for summary judgment on both counts. 15 That motion was granted, in part, after this Court found as a matter of law that “the Government has demonstrated that it had a right to possess the money in the Legal Trust Fund at the time it was wrongfully converted by Bailey.” 16
In reaching that conclusion, this Court declared Judge Fawsett’s application of the relation back doctrine codified in 21 U.S.C. § 853(c) to be law of the case. 17 On that subject, the Court stated:
[Ujnder Florida law, a necessary element of common law conversion is that the plaintiff must have had a present or immediate right to possession of the allegedly converted property at the time of the conversion ... Pursuant to law of the case, Judge Fawsett’s application of the relation back doctrine codified in § 853(c) requires a finding that the Government had a right to possess the Legal Trust Fund at the time of the conversion. In other words, although the Government did not actually have a present or immediate right to possession of the Legal Trust Fund at the time of the suspect withdrawals, the relation back doctrine necessarily establishes this element since tainted assets vest in the Government at the time of the criminal act. No provision of the [Comprehensive Forfeiture Act] suggests that § 853(c) cannot be relied upon to establish one element of a conversion action. 18
Ultimately, this Court’s summary judgment order adjudicated Bailey liable to the Government for converting the entire contents of the Legal Trust Fund.
19
Excepting
The common law conversion claim will proceed only on the Government’s request for punitive damages. In order to obtain punitive damages for Bailey’s conversion, the Government must make a showing of fraud, actual malice, deliberate violence, or oppression, or such gross negligence on the part of Bailey as to indicate a wanton disregard of the Government’s right to the Legal Trust Fund. 21
>$: X * * % *
The civil theft claim pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 772 will proceed only on the issue of Bailey’s intent. In order to recover under this statute, the Government must show that Bailey knowingly obtained the contents of the Legal Trust Fund or knowingly endeavored to obtain the contents of the Legal Trust Fund with the felonious intent to commit a theft. 22
On March 24, 2003, the undersigned judge presided over a jury trial on the remaining issues in the Government’s case. 23 After four days of proceedings, a jury returned a verdict against Bailey. 24 On the punitive damages claim, the jury awarded the Government $3,000,000 after finding that Bailey obtained the Legal Trust Fund with fraud, actual malice, deliberate violence, or oppression, or such gross negligence as to indicate a wanton disregard of the Government’s right to possession. 25 Addition of the $2,000,000 previously assessed against Bailey on summary judgment brought the Government’s damages to $5,000,000 on the conversion claim. Concerning the civil theft claim, the jury found that Bailey obtained the contents of the Legal Trust Fund with the felonious intent to commit a theft, thereby justifying a trebling of the Government’s $2,000,000 in actual damages for a total of $6,000,000. 26
Against that backdrop, Bailey now moves this Court to reconsider its grant of summary judgment in favor of the Government on its conversion claim and part of its civil theft claim. 27 In that regard, Bailey argues that it was error for this Court to find that the United States had a present or immediate right to possess the Legal Trust Fund pursuant to the relation back doctrine codified in 21 U.S.C. § 853(c). 28 In addition, Bailey moves this Court to set aside the punitive damages award as unwarranted by the evidence and the circumstances of the case. 29
III. THE PARTIES’ ARGUMENTS
In his motion for reconsideration, Bailey argues that this Court improperly applied the relation back doctrine to satisfy the elements of the Government’s claims because “it is clear that this retroactive vesting is based upon a legal fiction[,]”
30
and permitting a legal fiction to establish the
In response, the Government asserts that Bailey’s arguments are nonsensical inasmuch as they are based upon the “notion that the existence of the right to possess an otherwise possessory interest flowing from legal title does not exist at all until such time as that right has been enforced to judgment (or, presumably, by such power or persuasion as otherwise elicits consent).” 33 According to the Government, if such were the case, “then all conversion actions would fail for having become moot once the converting tortfea-sor alienated the very property subject to the possessory interest of the tort victim; and, such mootness would have the absurd result of allowing the offending tortfeasor to escape liability through such alienation while relegating the tort victim to pursuit of the converted property to potentially numerous parties, known or unknown.” 34
IY. STANDARD OF REVIEW
When evaluating a motion to reconsider, a court should proceed cautiously, realizing that “in the interests of finality and conservation of scarce judicial resources, reconsideration of a previous order is an extraordinary remedy to be employed sparingly.”
Lamar Adver. of Mobile, Inc. v. City of Lakeland,
The decision whether to grant or deny a motion to reconsider “is committed to the sound discretion of the district judge and will not be overturned on appeal absent an abuse of discretion”
See Am. Home Assurance Co. v. Glenn Estess & Assoc., Inc.,
V. LEGAL ANALYSIS
A. THE PRIOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT RULING
In this Court’s January 24, 2003 summary judgment order (Doc. No. 45), the undersigned judge — relying on the Fourth Circuit’s decision in
United States v. Moffitt, Zwerling & Kemler, P.C.,
At the time of the alleged conversion, the Government had neither a present nor immediate right to possess the Legal Trust Fund. On the contrary, its possesso-ry interest was dependent on future events. Specifically, it was contingent upon: (1) the conviction of the McCorkles; (2) rendition of a special verdict of forfeiture; and (3) entry of a favorable judgment against asserted bonafide purchasers for value. Such a speculative interest is too attenuated to maintain the possessory action of conversion or civil theft, and case law indicates that the relation back doctrine cannot remedy that deficiency.
“Deemed” possession pursuant to the legal fiction of relation back is the antithe
B. THE LAW OF CONVERSION
1. Generally
The modern tort of conversion arose out of the venerable common law action of trover.
See
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 222 cmt. a (1965); W. Page Keeton et. al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 15 at 89 (5th ed. 1984) (“Although the term had made some earlier appearances, conversion had its real genesis in the old common law action of trover”);
Freeman v. Corbin (In re Estate of Corbin),
2. The Right to Possession
a. Future Possessory Interests are Insufficient to Maintain a Conversion Action in Florida
At the common law, conversion actions were strictly limited; only plaintiffs capable of establishing either a present or immediate right of possession in the disputed res at the time of the taking could maintain the action. Under the modern version of the tort, however, conversion has been extended to protect future pos-sessory interests.
37
Thus, “[o]ne who is
The modern version of conversion subjects a tortfeasor to the following liabilities:
(1) to the possessor, liability for the entire value of the chattel in addition to any special damages resulting from the conversion, and this liability does not depend on the existence of the possessor’s responsibility to the owner for the loss of the chattel;
(2) to the bailor at will or other person entitled to immediate possession of the chattel, liability for its full value; [and]
(3) to the person entitled to the chattel at some future time, liability for the damage that such person can prove he has sustained as a result of the loss of the chattel, which ordinarily will be its full value less the value of the chattel’s use until the plaintiff’s right to possession has accrued.
Harper & James, The Law of Torts § 2:8 at 2:34-2:35 (3rd ed.1996).
While the modern view now prevails in the United States, this Court’s research reflects that a substantial minority of courts continue to follow the traditional
Utah follows orthodox criteria in applying the doctrine of conversion.. .The general rule is that an action for conversion is not maintainable unless the plaintiff, at the time of the alleged conversion, is entitled to immediate possession of the property. An interest in property which does not carry with it a right to possession is not sufficient; the right to maintain the action may not be based upon a right to possession at a future time.
Benton v. Utah Div. of State Lands and Forestry,
Like Utah, the State of Florida follows orthodox criteria in applying the doctrine of conversion. To maintain the action, a plaintiff must establish possession or an immediate right to possession in the property at the time of the conversion.
See Scherer v. Laborers’ Intern. Union of N. Am.,
In this instance, the Government’s conversion and civil theft claims are based upon a future possessory interest; notwithstanding any application of the relation back doctrine, the Government lacked a cognizable interest in the Legal Trust Fund at the time of the alleged conversion. Its interest came to fruition only when the Special Verdict of Forfeiture was entered.
See United States v. 92 Buena Vista Ave.,
The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals’ decision in
CHoPP Computer Corp. v. United States,
On the authority of its civil judgment, Chopp brought an action for conversion against the United States. See id. at 1346. To the extent that California law requires a plaintiff to prove possession at the time of the conversion, Chopp relied on ease law that a-constructive trust springs into existence at the moment of a wrongful taking. See id. at 1348.
Finding the concept of retroactive vesting inapposite in the context of a conversion, the Ninth Circuit held that Chopp could not maintain its action against the United States. See id. at 1348-51. The court of appeals explained:
We [reject] Chopp’s contention that the constructive trust vested title retroactively, at least in a manner that would render tortious prior levies by judgment creditors. Chopp is simply not in the position of a plaintiff who seeks a return of an identifiable res wrongfully taken or wrongfully retained ...
Chopp bears the burden of persuading us that it may bring this action. In a conversion, a plaintiff must recover, if at all, upon the strength of its own title and not upon the weakness of his adversary :.. The constructive trust, once imposed undoubtedly gave Chopp some kind ofan equitable interest in the [tainted proceeds] ... but that interest was recognized after the government had made a perfectly lawful levy on the ... [tainted proceeds]. Chopp’s late-perfected interest is too weak to overcome the ... possessory interest of the United States, lawfully acquired... We are unpersuaded that California courts would sanction that result.
Id. at 1350 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
As in CHoPP, the Defendant here rightfully acquired possession of the disputed res notwithstanding his knowledge of a third party’s potential interest therein; there was no flaw in Bailey’s title when he acquired the Legal Trust Fund. Similarly, as in CHoPP, the Plaintiffs interest here arose too late to affect the rights and obligations of the parties on the date of the alleged conversion. Accordingly, following CHoPP, this Court finds that the United States’ late perfected interest is too attenuated to vitiate Bailey’s lawful acquisition and disbursement of the Legal Trust Fund. At the time Bailey committed these acts, the United States was not in the position of a plaintiff who sought the return of an identifiable res wrongfully taken or wrongfully retained. For that reason, the concept of retroactive vesting cannot transform Bailey’s rightful possession of the Legal Trust Fund into a tortious act of interference with Government property under Florida law.
b. Contingent Interests Are Insufficient to Support a Conversion Action in Florida
In addition to the problems associated with converting future interests, the Government’s claims are also fatally flawed because at the time of the alleged conversion, the Government’s possessory right was not determinate. Instead, it was contingent upon a conviction of the McCor-kles, a special verdict of forfeiture, and a favorable outcome against asserted bona-fide purchasers for value. While many courts have extended conversion to cover vested future interests, few, if any, have countenanced conversion actions based upon the mere possibility of future possession.
See, e.g., Cirrincione v. Johnson,
In
United States v. Loughrey,
“Florida decisions seem to be in harmony with the view taken by the ... Supreme Court.”
Joseph Dixon Crucible Co. v. Paul,
There, Lennar Florida Holdings, Inc. (hereinafter, “Lennar”) held two mortgages on apartment complexes operated by Ginsberg. See id. at 492. Each mortgage gave Lennar a right to the rents upon default. See id. However, when the mortgages went into default, Ginsberg allegedly diverted the rents to his personal use. See id. As a result, Lennar filed suit alleging, inter alia, conversion and civil theft. See id. at 492-93. Both of Lennar’s claims were based on Fla. Stat. § 697.07, which governs the steps a mortgagee must take in order to enforce an assignment of rents. In relevant part, that statute provides:
(1) A mortgage or separate instrument may provide for an assignment of rents of real property or any interests therein as security for payment of an indebtedness.
(2) If such assignment is made, the mortgagee shall hold a lien on the rents, and the lien created by the assignment shall be perfected and effective against third parties upon re-cordation of the mortgage or separate instrument in the public records in the county in which the real property is located, according to law.
(3) Unless otherwise agreed to in writing by the mortgagee and mortgagor, the assignment of rents shall be enforceable upon the mortgagor’s default and written demand for the rents made by the mortgagee to the mortgagor, whereupon the mortgagor shall turn over all rents in the possession of the mortgagor at the time of the written demand or collected thereafter (the “collected rents”) to the mortgagee less payments of any expenses authorized by the mortgagee in writing.
Fla. Stat. § 697.07. According to Lennar, § 697.07 afforded it an automatic right to the rents upon default thereby satisfying the immediate possession element of its conversion and civil theft actions. See id. at 497-98.
Acknowledging that Lennar’s right to possession was dependent upon affirmative
Assuming ... that a proper demand had been made ... Lennar, at best, under the statute, only held a lien on the rents. In order to reduce that lien to possession Lennar was required to foreclose on the lien ... thus, it cannot claim, under the statute, a right to possession of the rents.
* * * * * *
Under the loan documents Lennar had many remedies[,] none of which automatically vested upon default. Although Lennar had the right to -take possession of the properties; accelerate- the debt; operate the property; collect and possess rents; and generally every right[ ] of action and remedy available under applicable law, these rights, by their terms, required some affirmative act by Lennar prior to their becoming vested... It cannot be said ... that Lennar has ... an immediate right to possession of the rents under the loan documents[.]
Id.
at 498-99 (internal citations omitted);
see also Citation Mortgage, Ltd. v. RC of a Retirement Living, Ltd., Series III,
With respect to the civil theft claim, the Third District reached a similar conclusion:
In Count III Lennar alleges civil theft. As stated above, Lennar has failed to allege a possessory interest in the rents. Since Lennar has not stated a right to possession of the rents Lennar may not state a cause of action for civil theft of those rents. Civil theft requires that one knowingly obtain or use the property of another. Simply- put[,] the rents were not Lennar’s and Lennar may not complain that they have been stolen from them.
Furthermore, Lennar may not, as a matter of law under these facts, plead an intent to commit theft. Since Lennar has failed to plead a possessory interest in the rents the natural inference is that the rents were properly in the possession of Ginsberg ... Ginsberg ... [was] rightfully in possession of the rents, thus, [he] could not form the necessary intent to steal those rents ... As a matter of law, under these facts, Lennar has failed to allege a cause of action for conversion.
Id. at 500-01 (internal citations omitted).
As in Ginsberg, here the Plaintiff had no right to possession or immediate possession at the time of the alleged conversion. Instead, the United States’ interest was contingent on the happening of several future events. Likewise, as in Ginsberg, the alleged tortfeasor — Bailey—was rightfully in possession of the res at all relevant times. Accordingly, following the view taken by Florida’s Third District Court of Appeal, the United States is in no position to maintain either its conversion or civil theft action.
c. Conversion Based On Demand and Refusal
When a defendant rightfully acquires possession of a plaintiffs property, an action for conversion may arise out of the plaintiffs demand for its return and the defendant’s refusal to surrender it. 18 Am.Jur.2d
Conversion
§ 84 (2003) (“A demand and refusal may be necessary to constitute a conversion, and to enable the plaintiff to maintain an action ... [i]f possession was not acquired by a tortious taking”); 18 Am.Jur.2d
Conversion
§ 47 (2003) (“Demand and refusal ... gives rise to a cause of action for conversion where the defendant rightfully obtained possession, but wrongfully retained it”);
Marine
A demand and refusal alone constitutes a conversion where no unauthorized act has occurred prior to the demand and refusal. In that case, the demand and refusal transforms the defendant’s rightful possession into a wrongful detention.
See Harrell v. Allen,
In the matter at hand, an actual conversion had not occurred prior to the United States’ demand. Unlike the case where a bailor delivers money to a bailee, and the bailee subsequently converts it to his or her own use, Bailey’s acts of obtaining and disbursing the subject funds were authorized at the time they were committed. By virtue of the McCorkles’ consent, Bailey lawfully created the Legal Trust Fund and facilitated disbursements therefrom. Accordingly, the Court must consider whether the Government’s demand and Bailey’s refusal, without more, may form the basis for a valid conversion claim.
Landsman Packing Co., Inc. v. Cont’l Can Co., Inc.,
While conversion arising from demand and refusal presents a facially colorable theory of recovery, it is unsuited to this case for two reasons. Foremost, at the time of the Government’s demand, Bailey was unable to comply; he no longer had possession and/or control over the Legal Trust Fund. A demand is not “effective if the failure to comply is explained by want of possession.”
Robinson v. Hartridge,
Moreover, Bailey’s refusal was unaccompanied by any wrongful deprivation or unauthorized act detrimental to the Govern
In sum, Bailey is not liable to the Government for injury to its possessory interest in the Legal Trust Fund because Bailey’s dominion or control over the Legal Trust Fund was never in contravention to the Government’s possessory interest therein; his acts of obtaining and disbursing the subject funds were' authorized. Further, Bailey is not liable to the Government for refusing to return the Legal Trust Fund because he never possessed the Legal Trust Fund when the Government had an interest in it. In other words, he never had possession of the Government’s property. How can one be expected to return property (the Government’s interest in the Legal Trust Fund) when he never had possession of it? 42
In reaching this conclusion, the Court notes that Congress could amend the forfeiture laws to remedy the predicament plaguing the Government here. In their current form, however, the forfeiture laws are patently insufficient to accomplish what the Government seeks to do in this case. As Judge Fawsett recognized, this Court does not have the power to order Bailey to “forfeit property other than the property which is expressly subject to forfeiture under sections 853(a), (c), and (p).” Complaint (Doc. No. 1), Ex. 2 at 31-32.
To conclude otherwise, would require this Court to extend the common law in an entirely new direction in contravention of Florida law. That action would be tantamount to “creating law” when Congress has failed to legislate. This Court will not intrude into the province of Congress by ignoring the well-established judicial limitations in our three-branch government. In the words of Justice Frankfurter:
A judge must not rewrite a statute, neither to enlarge nor to contract it. Whatever temptations the statesmanship of policy-making might wisely suggest, construction must eschew interpolation and evisceration. He must not read in by way of creation. He mustread out except to avoid patent nonsense or internal contradiction. ■
Frankfurter, Some Reflections on the Reading of Statutes, 47 Colum. L.Rev. 527, 533, 535 (1947).
VI. PUNITIVE DAMAGES
A.GENERALLY
In the alternative, Bailey argues that the jury’s $3,000,000 punitive damage award should be set aside on the grounds that (1) the summary judgment should not have been granted or published to the jury, and (2) the punitive damage award is unwarranted, inappropriate, serves no legitimate interest of the United States, and is contrary to law. 43
Although this Court’s reversal of its grant of summary judgment necessarily vitiates the punitive damages award and renders this issue moot, in the interests of judicial economy, the Court will consider Bailey’s alternative argument.
B.THE STANDARD OF REVIEW
“In our judicial system compensatory and punitive damages, although usually awarded at the same time by the same decisionmaker, serve different purposes.”
State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
In examining punitive damage awards to ensure that they are based upon an application of law rather than a decisionmaker’s caprice, the United States Supreme Court instructs reviewing courts to consider three guideposts: (1) the difference between the punitive damages awarded by the jury and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases; (2) the disparity between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages awarded; and (3) the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s misconduct. See id.
“It should be presumed a plaintiff has been made whole for his injuries by compensatory damages, so punitive damages should only be awarded if the defendant’s culpability, after having paid compensatory damages, is so reprehensible as to warrant the imposition of further sanctions to achieve the punishment or deterrence.” Id. at 1521 (internal citation omitted).
C.LEGAL ANALYSIS
1. The Difference Between the Punitive Damages Awarded by the Jury and the Civil Penalties Authorized or Imposed in Comparable Cases
In accordance with the Supreme Court’s decision in Campbell, the first due process guidepost this Court will analyze is the disparity between the punitive damages awarded by the jury in this case and the civil penalties authorized or imposed in comparable cases.
Given the fact that the Government’s actual damages ($2,000,000) were trebled ($6,000,000) pursuant to Fla. Stat. § 772.11(1), it is axiomatic that this prong of the Supreme Court’s due process test weighs in favor of upholding the jury’s $3,000,000 punitive damage award.
2. The Disparity Between the Actual or Potential Harm Suffered by the Plaintiff and the Punitive Damages Awarded
The second guidepost is the disparity between the actual or potential harm suffered by the plaintiff in comparison to the amount of the punitive damage award. While the Supreme Court has consistently rejected a mathematical formula in that regard, it has recognized that “an award of more than four times the amount of compensatory damages might be close to the line of constitutional impropriety.”
Campbell,
538 U.S. at -,
In the case at bar, the court awarded $2,000,000 in compensatory damages, and the jury levied punitive damages in the sum of $3,000,000. That represents a multiplier of 1.5, which is not per se unconstitutional. 46
3. The Degree of Reprehensibility of the Defendant’s Misconduct
The third and final due process guidepost is the degree of reprehensibility of the defendant’s misconduct.
In
Campbell,
the Supreme Court stated that “[t]he most important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the degree of reprehensibility of
Applying the aforementioned principles to the case at hand, this Court finds that the $3,000,000 punitive damage award entered against Bailey should be set aside in its entirety.
It is undisputed that the harm caused by Bailey’s alleged conversion and/or civil theft was economic, not physical; that Bailey’s actions exhibited no indifference or reckless disregard for the health and safety of others; and that the target of Bailey’s conduct — the Federal Government— was not financially vulnerable.
Moreover, although the conduct in question technically involved repeated actions — insofar as Bailey facilitated a series of conversions 47 — the Government’s case unquestionably stems from one isolated incident: Bailey’s creation of a Legal Trust Fund for the payment of attorney’s fees with funds that he knew were subject to forfeiture.
Finally, assuming for present purposes that Bailey acted with deceit in converting the Government’s funds, other evidence suggests that further sanctions are unnecessary to achieve the desired punishment or deterrent effect.
There is no evidence that the U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Florida has ever sued any attorney other than Bailey for the return of attorneys’ fees. That Bailey has been “singled out” is particularly apparent inasmuch as while other attorneys on the McCorkle defense team received $1,222,454.29 of the $2,000,000 Legal Trust Fund, the Government has brought suit only against Bailey.
This Court is also troubled by the fact that the Government’s conversion action is predicated on the relation back doctrine codified in 21 U.S.C. § 853(c). The undersigned is reluctant to affirm a discretionary punitive damages award based, in part, upon a legal fiction.
Finally, if the civil remedy of conversion is available to the Government, Bailey will be hable for the entire $2,000,000 even though he (or his designee) received only $777,545.71 from the Legal Trust Fund. Bailey’s conduct does not warrant the imposition of further sanctions to achieve punishment or deterrence. Accordingly, the $3,000,000 punitive damage verdict shall be set aside in its entirety.
YII. CONCLUSION
Based on the foregoing, it is ORDERED that:
1. The Defendant’s, F. Lee Bailey, April 29, 2003 Motion for Reconsideration of the Court’s Grant of Summary Judgment in Favor of the Government in its Order of January 24, 2003 (Doc. No. 82) is GRANTED.
VACATED.
(b) The Court determines that the Defendant, F. Lee Bailey, is entitled to judgment as a matter of law on the Government’s claims of conversion and civil theft.
2. The Defendant’s, F. Lee Bailey, April 29, 2003 Motion Under Rule 29(b) to Set Aside Punitive Damage Jury Verdict as Unwarranted by the Evidence, and the Circumstances of the Case (Doc. No. 84) is GRANTED. The $3,000,000 punitive damage award rendered against F. Lee Bailey on March 27, 2003 (Doc. No. 71) is SET ASIDE.
3. The clerk shall enter final judgment providing that the Plaintiff, the United States of America, shall take nothing on its claims against the Defendant, F. Lee Bailey. The judgment shall further provide that the Defendant shall recover his costs arising from this action.
4. The clerk is directed to close the case.
5. All other pending motions are denied as moot.
Notes
. See Joint Pretrial Statement (Doc. No. 42) at 22.
. 21 U.S.C. § 853(n)(6)(B).
. See Complaint (Doc. No. 1), ¶ 50, at 18-19; see also Answer (Doc. No. 29), ¶ 50 at 9.
. See Joint Pretrial Statement (Doc. No. 42) at 22.
. See Complaint (Doc. No. 1), Ex. 1 at 61; see also id., Ex. 2 at 46-47.
. Title 21, United States Code, § 853(c) provides, in pertinent part, as follows:
Third party transfers. All right, title, and interest in property described in subsection (a) vests in the United States upon the corn-mission of the act giving rise to forfeiture under this section. Any such property that is subsequently transferred to a person other than the defendant may be the subject of a special verdict of forfeiture and thereafter shall be ordered forfeited to the United States, unless the transferee establishes in a hearing pursuant to subsection (n) that he is a bona fide purchaser for value of such property who at the time of purchase was reasonably without cause to believe that the property was subject to forfeiture under this section.
. Complaint (Doc. No. 1), Ex. 2 at 23.
. Id. at 24.
. Id. at 31-32 (footnote added).
.Id.
at 32. On February 18, 2003, Judge Fawsett's findings of fact and legal conclusions were affirmed in
United States v. McCorkle,
. See generally Complaint (Doc. No. 1).
. See id. at 24.
. See id.
. See id.
. See generally Doc. No. 33.
. Doc. No. 45 at 36
.See id. at 32-33.
. Id. at 36-37 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
. See id. at 37-38.
. See id., ¶¶ 3-4 at 55.
. Id., ¶ 3 at 55.
. Id., ¶ 4 at 55.
. See generally Docs. No. 65, 68-70.
. See generally Verdict Form (Doc. No. 71).
. Id. at 1.
. See id. at 2.
. See generally Doc. No. 82.
. See Doc. No. 85 at 12-13.
. See generally Doc. No. 84.
. Doc. No. 85 at 12 (internal citations omitted).
. Id. at 13.
.
Id.
(quoting
United States v. 92 Buena Vista Ave.,
507 U.S. Ill, 125,
. Doc. No. 93 at 6.
. Id.
. In
United States v. Moffitt, Zwerling & Kemler, P.C.,
There, in August of 1991, William Paul Cov-ington — who was under investigation for cocaine distribution — paid $103,800 in tainted cash to the law firm of Moffitt, Zwerling & Kemler, P.C.' See id. at 1194. Subsequently, on October 30, 1991, Covington was indicted on drug trafficking, firearms, and money laundering charges. See id. The indictment included a broad forfeiture count including all of Covington’s property derived from criminal activity. See id.
On September 25, 1992, Covington entered a guilty plea to the charges contained in the indictment.
See id.
Thereafter, the Court ordered the forfeiture — pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853 — of all property constituting the proceeds of Covington's drug trafficking including the $103,800 fee that Covington transferred to the law firm.
See id.
at 1194-95. Although the law firm filed a third-party petition claiming that it was a bona fide purchaser for value, the district court concluded that the firm was reasonably without cause to be
On October 21, 1994, the Government sued the law firm for conversion in accordance with Virginia law. See id. As in Florida, Virginia requires a plaintiff to prove that he or she had possession or an immediate right to possession of the subject property at the time of the conversion. See id. at 1198-99. Citing the relation back doctrine, the district court found that the Government satisfied that element:
The statutory language [of the Comprehensive Forfeiture Act] supports the government's view. The statute simply provides for retroactive title, and does not limit the purposes for which the title is effective ... In sum, there is no indication in § 853 that the United States’ retroactive title does not apply in the context of a conversion action. The statute's plain language compels the conclusion that, it does.
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While the idea of a lawful transaction retroactively becoming a wrongful taking is counterintuitive, the relation back rule is a legal fiction whose effect is counterintuitive in every instance. In sum, the statutory language and prior cases establish the general rule that the government's title under § 853(c) is to have a retroactive effect, and that general rule is applicable here. As a result, the government, in retrospect, had title to, and a right to immediate possession of, the $103,800 in August 1991, the time of the alleged conversion.
Id. at 1200-02 (internal citations and quotations omitted).
In the alternative, the district court found that the Government satisfied the immediate possession element through 21 U.S.C. § 881(b)(4), which allows the Government to seize property without a warrant or through judicial process when “the Attorney General has probable cause to believe that the property is subject to civil forfeiture.” See id. at 1202. Although the Government did not actually exercise its right to seize the $103,800 under § 881(b), the court determined that the Government’s ability to do so was the equivalent of possession or an immediate right to possession:
[T]he government had an absolute and unconditional right to immediate seizure and possession of the $103,000 in August 1991 pursuant to § 881(b), even though its right to maintain possession was contingent on its success in a subsequent forfeiture proceeding.
Id. at 1203.
On appeal, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed the district court's legal conclusions, stating:
Under the relation back doctrine codified in § 853(c), the government had the right to possess the $103,800 at the time the law firm received it in August, 1991. 21 U.S.C. § 853(c). No provision of the CFA suggests that § 853(c) cannot be relied upon to establish one element of a conversion action. Moffitt, Zwerling emphasizes, however, that the government did not actually gain title to the $103,800 until the entry of the forfeiture order. But once the forfeiture order was entered, the government’s title dated back in time to the criminal activity giving rise to the forfeiture, a date which necessarily was prior to August, 1991. See United States v. 92 Buena Vista Avenue,507 U.S. 111 , 125-27,113 S.Ct. 1126 ,122 L.Ed.2d 469 (1993). The government therefore had a right to possess the $103,800 in August, 1991.
United States v. Moffitt, Zwerling & Kemler, P.C.,
. In reaching this conclusion, the Court recognizes that both Judge Fawsett and the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals intimated that the Government, on these facts, could proceed with a cause of action for conversion.
See United States v. McCorkle,
. The common law rule was extended to permit recovery by one who had the immediate right to possession ... But an owner who had neither possession nor the immediate right to it at the time of the conversion could not maintain trover. The owner's remedy was an action on the case for the damage to his interest in the goods. Although this distinction persists today in a good many courts, it is an antique procedural surviv[or], with nothing to recommend it. The important fact is that the person entitled only to future possession can recover, in whatever form of action, the full value of his interest in the goods which has been appropriated by the defendant, and no more. If this is not to be called conversion, it is at least the same thing by another name. There are a substantial number of courts which have discarded the procedural distinction, and have called the action one of conversion.
W. Page Keeton et. al., Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 15 at 104-05 (5th
. Because conversion is an ancient tort that has remained relatively unchanged since its inception, many of the cases cited in this order were decided quite some time ago.
. In
Bonner v. City of Prichard,
. In making this determination, the undersigned judge recognizes that several courts applying Florida law have indicated that a defendant's want of possession at the time of an unmet demand is immaterial.
See Misabec Mercantile, Inc. De Panama v. Donaldson, Lufkin & Jenrette ACLI Futures, Inc.,
Those cases are distinguishable, however, insofar as they contemplate a demand and refusal succeeding an unauthorized act or coinciding with a wrongful deprivation. For instance, where an individual entrusts property to a stockbroker, and the stockbroker subsequently converts the property to his or her own use, an unmet demand is actionable on account of the unauthorized act. Likewise, where an individual entrusts his vehicle to a mechanic for repair, and the mechanic refuses to return the vehicle upon payment, an unmet demand is actionable by virtue of the wrongful deprivation. Conversely, where, as here, an individual entitled to possession of property rightfully expends that property without depriving another of its interest (because the other party lacked an interest at the relevant time) there is no cause of action.
.
See Special Purpose Accounts Receivable Coop. Corp. v. Prime One Cap. Co.,
. This issue is one which is best decided by the Florida Supreme Court. If federal district courts in the State of Florida had the ability to certify questions of law to the Florida Supreme Court, the undersigned judge would have inquired whether the relation back doctrine could satisfy the element of possession in a Florida conversion action. Inasmuch as this vehicle is unavailable, however, the Court must rely on persuasive indicia as to how the Florida Supreme Court would decide the issue; case law indicates that possession via a legal fiction is insufficient.
. See generally Motion Under Rule 29(b) to Set Aside Punitive Damage Jury Verdict as Unwarranted by the Evidence, and the Circumstances of the Case (Doc. No. 84).
.Florida Statute § 812.014, the criminal section setting forth the elements of theft, provides, in pertinent part:
(1) A person commits theft if he or she knowingly obtains or uses, or endeavors to obtain or use, the property of another with intent to, either temporarily or permanently:
(a) Deprive the other person of a right to the property or a benefit from the property-
(b) Appropriate the property to his or her own use or to the use of any person not entitled to the use of the property ...
If the property stolen is valued at $100,000 or more ... the offender commits grand theft in the first degree, punishable as a felony of the first degree, as provided in ... 775.083...
Florida Statute § 775.083 provides, in pertinent part, that "[fjines for designated crimes and for noncriminal violations” shall not exceed "$10,000 when the conviction is of a felony of the first or second degree.”
. Florida Statute § 772.11(1), the civil section granting private parties a cause of action against defendants for violations of the criminal law proscribing theft, provides, in pertinent part:
Any person who proves by clear and convincing evidence that he or she has been injured ... by reason of any violation of [§ 812.014] has a cause of action for threefold the actual damages ... and ... is entitled to ... reasonable attorney's fees and court costs in the trial and appellate courts.
Fla. Stat. § 772.11(1).
. Incidentally, even if this Court awarded the Government only $777,545.71 on its claim, the amount Bailey received personally from the Legal Trust Fund, the $3,000,000 punitive damage award would not be unconstitutional in and of itself. That represents a multiplier of only 3.85.
. The Court assumes the fact of conversion solely for the purpose of addressing Bailey's attack on the punitive damages award. As discussed supra, this Court has determined that Bailey’s conduct did not amount to conversion.
