Case Information
*1 Before: SILER and ROGERS, Circuit Judges; JORDAN, District Judge. [*]
SILER , Circuit Judge. Defendant Chester C. Calkins appeals from his sentence of 46 months’ imprisonment pursuant to a plea of guilty to aiding and abetting bank fraud. Calkins and his spouse operated a scheme whereby they sold condominiums and received payment from the purchasers. Calkins represented to the purchaser that the mortgage on the sold condominium unit would be paid but instead intentionally led his creditors to believe that no sales had occurred, so as to dely repayment of the obligation. The district court found that Calkins intended losses of approximately $4.9 million to the various lending institutions. Because the district court did not reduce Calkins’s amount of loss by the amount of collateral securing each loan, we VACATE the sentence and REMAND to the district court to consider whether the loss should be reduced by the amount of collateral in accordance with USSG § 2B1.1.
F ACTS
In 2005, an information was filed charging Calkins and Antoinette M. Calkins, his spouse, with aiding and abetting bank fraud. 18 U.S.C. §§ 1344 and 2. The information alleged that he diverted funds as part of a larger scheme and artifice to defraud a number of banks by delaying repayment, beginning in 1999 and continuing until 2002. The scheme involved 47 condominiums and approximately $4,983,991.85 in closing proceeds that were not forwarded to the banks for satisfaction of their construction loans immediately upon sale as contractually required. Calkins was required to pay a certain amount for each unit as it was sold. The following example is provided to illustrate the scheme: Calkins failed to pay Huntington National Bank $75,565, the apportioned amount of a construction loan (or mortgage) on 532 Fawn Run Drive, at the time of the sale of the unit, instead, diverting the funds to a business run by Calkins, Homes by Calkins, Inc. (“HBC”), and for his personal use.
Calkins was the sole stockholder of HBC, a residential building contractor. HBC financed the construction of these sites with loans from the banks. Under the terms of the construction loans, HBC was required at the time of closing to pay off the portion of the loan that was associated with the unit that was being sold. The typical apportioned amount of the construction loan (or the mortgage) was 75% to 90% of a unit’s contract or sale price. If a unit was not sold, the loans were not due; thus Calkins could dely repayment by concealing sale until a later time.
From 1999 through 2002, HBC sold 47 units to individuals who paid cash for their units. Upon the sale of the units, enabling Calkins to conceal the sales from the banks. Calkins failed to pay off the apportioned amount of the construction loans, resulting in the purchaser’s unknowingly taking possession of the unit with an attached lien. As a result, Calkins delayed repayment of $4,983,991.85.
Huntington National Bank discovered Calkins’s fraud in 2002 when HBC’s loans became delinquent. The bank learned that Calkins had conveyed ten properties and received payment without paying down the construction loans at the time of closing. In fact, at the time the bank discovered the scheme, Calkins delayed paying any debt. Calkins later repaid some of the debt and as of the date of sentencing he had paid all but approximately $300,000 of the debt owed.
Calkins and his spouse pleaded guilty and agreed to the recommended base offense level of 6. The parties also stipulated that the relevant conduct was $4,983,991.85. Calkins, however, reserved the right to argue at sentencing for a reduction in the base offense level under Application Note 2(E)(ii) to USSG § 2B1.1. As discussed below, the Guidelines permit a district court to reduce a defendant’s losses based upon the value of pledged collateral. [1]
Prior to sentencing, Calkins objected to the Presentence Report’s (PSR) calculation of loss at $4,877,469.85 and resulting 18-level increase under USSG § 2B1.1(b)(1)(J). [2] The PSR also recommended a two-level increase in the offense level because Calkins derived more than $1,000,000 in gross receipts from one or more banks as a result of his offense, and a three-level reduction for timely acceptance of responsibility. Thus, his total offense level was 23, subjecting him to a guideline range of 46 to 57 months. Calkins objected and argued that under Application Note 2(E)(ii), a credit against the loss should be taken to reflect the full collateralization of each bank’s construction loan including the following: (1) a first security interest in the entire condominium project; (2) a pledge of all assets of HBC; and (3) a pledge of all of Calkins’s personal assets.
Calkins outlined his version of the liquidation of the construction security interests and notes held by each of the banks and calculated loss at the time of sentencing as $331,892.50. According to his calculations, a loss figure between $200,000 and $400,000 would result in a 12- level increase under USSG 2B1.1(b)(1)(G) with a total offense level of 17. The sentencing range would then be 24 to 30 months.
At sentencing in 2005, the district court found that it was difficult to determine the collateral pledged under the construction loans. It asked if it was required to determine the fair market value at the time of sentencing from disposition of the collateral, or if the collateral has not been disposed of by that time, the fair market value of the collateral at the time of sentencing.
[2] The following mortgage amounts were associated with the 47 individual condominium units sold as they relate to each bank: Huntington Bank, $952,146; Bank of Kentucky, $1,271,055; Provident Bank, $586,765; U.S. Bank, $664,422; and Bank One, $1,403,081.85.
of the collateral at the time of sentencing and indicated that it did not have any information about that. The district court ultimately rejected Calkins’s request for a reduction under Application Note 2(E)(ii) to Section 2B1.1 due to his intent not to repay the loan and the consideration that calculating loss amounts at the time of sentencing would reduce Calkins’s culpability. It found that “[t]he amount of loss should be determined as it exists at the time of its detection rather than [sentencing].”
The district court concluded with the findings that (1) it must consider the greater of the actual or intended loss, which was approximately $4.9 million; (2) Application Note 2(E)(ii) does not apply where the banks’ losses are reduced from any source other than the sale or return of the 47 mortgaged properties; and (3) Application Note 2(E)(ii) does not apply because the collateral itself was part of the fraudulent scheme and not intended to reduce the amounts defrauded. It sentenced Calkins to 46 months and ordered payment of $437,173.17 in restitution.
S TANDARD OF REVIEW
This court reviews
de novo
a sentencing court’s resolution of whether collateral should be
considered when determining intended loss.
United States v. Katzopoulos
,
A NALYSIS
After the decision in
United States v. Booker
,
Calkins argues that he should be resentenced because each bank held a first security interest in the entire condominium construction project, including any unsold units. He claims that the banks holding a security interest in the entire condominium project mitigated their losses when they sold the loans. Specifically, Huntington Bank, Provident Bank, and Bank One reduced their losses when they sold their construction notes and liens to third parties. Calkins reasons that the sale of the loans was the disposition of collateral and a reduction of each bank’s losses and that the banks were never in danger of failing to locate the collateral securing their loans. Thus, he concludes that the district court should not be allowed to assume that he intended the maximum possible loss when Calkins did not intend to conceal collateral.
Loss is defined as the “greater of actual loss or intended loss.” USSG § 2B1.1 comment. (n. 2). While “actual loss” is “the reasonably foreseeable pecuniary harm that resulted from the offense,” “intended loss” is “the pecuniary harm that was intended to result from the offense,” including the “intended pecuniary harm that would have been impossible or unlikely to occur ( e.g. , as in a government sting operation, or an insurance fraud in which the claim exceeded the insured value).” Id. We usually defer to the loss calculation of the district court because it is “in a unique position to assess the evidence and estimate the loss based upon that evidence.” Id.
The district court erred in concluding that the defendant’s intended loss,
i.e.
, his intent not
to pay off the construction loans, would eliminate an offset for pledged collateral.
See, e.g., United
States v. Wright
,
In
United States v. Weidner
,
Under the intended loss theory a court may decline to reduce the intended loss by the
collateral pledged where the district court finds that the defendant intended to deprive the lender of
its collateral. Such a finding has been supported where the defendant conceals the collateral.
See
United States v. Williams
,
We held in
United States v. Quigley
that the district court should have reduced the loss
amount by an amount recovered by “reason of the cross-collateralization agreement.”
Upon remand, the district court should determine whether the sales of the construction loans held by the banks were disposed collateral warranting a reduction in the loss calculation. In addition, we cannot discern whether U.S. Bank sold its loan or disposed of any of the underlying collateral. The district court should consider whether to credit any losses for the presentencing sales of additional units that were not involved in the fraud. Calkins also suggests that U.S. Bank and Bank of Kentucky held collateral that was not disposed of at the time of sentencing and the calculation of loss should be reduced by its fair market value. Moreover, the district court should take account of any personal assets of Calkins that were pledged as collateral. Lastly, in calculating “the fair market value of the collateral at the time of sentencing,” the district court should consider any unreleased liens on the homes for which cash was paid.
We reject Calkins’s argument that previously unsecured personal payments or payments
from third parties should count as collateral. First, the application note is clear that only disposition
of collateral or the fair market value of any unsold collateral reduces the loss amount. In addition,
we held in
United States v. Scott
, 74 F.3d 107, 112 (6th Cir. 1996), that subsequent voluntary
restitution is not the same as posting collateral. A “defendant in a fraud case should not be able to
reduce the amount of loss for sentencing purpose by offering to make restitution after being caught.”
United States v. Mummert
,
We VACATE the sentence and REMAND for further resentencing.
Notes
[*] The Honorable Leon Jordan, United States District Judge, Eastern District of Tennessee, sitting by designation.
[1] USSG § 2B1.1, comment. (n. 2E): Loss shall be reduced by the following: (i) The money returned, and the fair market value of the property returned and the services rendered, by the defendant or other persons acting jointly with the defendant, to the victim before the offense was detected. The time of detection of the offense is the earlier of (I) the time the offense was discovered by a victim or government agency; or (II) the time the defendant knew or reasonably should have known that the offense was detected or about to be detected by a victim or a government agency. (ii) In a case involving collateral pledged or otherwise provided by the defendant, the amount the victim has recovered
