Appellant Gordana Kristofic was convicted, after a jury trial in November 1986, of converting $50,000 of United States funds, specifically the proceeds of a loan from the Small Business Administration (the “SBA”), in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641. She was sentenced to one year and one day in jail and assessed a $1,000 fine. This appeal presents the novel question whether one who misapplies the proceeds of a federal government loan may be charged with conversion of United States property. We conclude that under the circumstances before us this conduct does not violate 18 U.S.C. § 641, and we reverse.
I.
The appellant opened Gordaná’s Restaurant in Chicago in 1981. In January 1982, *1296 she applied for an SBA loan, requesting $60,000 for leasehold improvements, new equipment and working capital. She supplemented her application with documents relating to the planned use of the proceeds, including a proposal prepared by Reston Enterprises describing the desired equipment and leasehold improvements.
On December 1, 1982, the SBA issued Kristofic a $39,000 check made out to “Gor-dana Kristofic d/b/a Gordana’s Restaurant and Reston Enterprises.” A second check for $21,000, representing the working capital portion of the loan, bore only Kristofic’s name. The loan agreement signed by Kris-tofic specified the respective amounts of the proceeds allocated for leasehold improvements, new equipment and working capital. Kristofic agreed, among other things, to keep books according to SBA standards, to allow the SBA to inspect and audit her books, to submit semi-annual reports and financial statements and to obtain prior SBA approval of plans and specifications for leasehold improvements. The loan agreement provided that none of its provisions would be deemed waived without the SBA’s prior written consent. Kris-tofic certified that she would use the proceeds as agreed.
Less than a month after receiving the checks, Kristofic closed Gordana’s. James Reston of Reston Enterprises endorsed the $39,000 check and turned it over to Kristofic, never performing any of the proposed work at the restaurant. Rather than putting the funds to their intended use, Kris-tofic applied some of the money to pre-ex-isting debts, made a down payment on a car, lent $12,000 to a friend unconnected with the restaurant and apparently kept $3,000 in cash. In April 1983, Kristofic moved to Texas and invested the remaining proceeds in the “Texas Renegades,” a bar which failed a few months after opening. The SBA did not receive notice of or approve any of these expenditures. In June 1983, however, appellant informed the Chicago SBA office that she was planning to move to Texas and requested that her records be transferred to Houston. She did not, at that time, notify the SBA of her use of the loan proceeds. The SBA did transfer her file to Houston, but when Kristofic stopped making payments shortly thereafter, it began an investigation.
Whoever embezzles, steals, purloins, or knowingly converts to his use or the use of another ... any ... money, or thing of value of the United States ... shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both....
At her trial, Kristofic denied knowing that she was required to obtain SBA approval before spending the money other than as agreed at the loan closing. She stated that she made a good faith business decision to close Gordana’s and invest instead in the bar. Besides her conviction under 18 U.S.C. § 641, which is on appeal here, she was convicted of knowingly submitting a forged lease with her loan application (18 U.S.C. § 1001) but acquitted of submitting a false list of equipment and furniture. She has not appealed the section 1001 conviction.
II.
Kristofic contends on appeal that the government failed to establish an essential element of a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641, that she converted “a thing of value of the United States.” 1 She argues that once the loan funds were in her hands, they were her property, and the government’s only claim was to repayment according to the terms of the loan.
As a matter of basic principles, loan proceeds do not remain the property of the lender.
See Calcasieu-Marine Nat’l Bank v. American Employers’ Ins. Co.,
The Supreme Court analyzed these relationships in
United States v. Johnston,
The seminal case construing section 641 is
Morissette v. United States,
Of course, traditional notions of conversion contemplate situations in which the property comes into the purported converter’s possession lawfully. Id. at 272. These circumstances, however, encompass a trust or a bailment, not a loan. Id. (conversion may include misuse of “property placed in one’s custody for limited use”). These situations and the principles governing them are of no help to the government here. In the case before us, the government relinquished its interest in the particular funds lent to Kristofic, retaining only the right to be repaid an equivalent sum of $60,000 with interest. In fact, Kristofic was prosecuted, not for refusing to pay back the money, but for breaching the conditions of the loan agreement.
The government argues that it did retain a property interest in the loan proceeds and cites a line of Seventh Circuit cases applying the so-called “supervision and control” test. We have in the past applied this test to determine whether property, after distribution to some local or state agency or
*1298
entity, retains its “federal” character. If the federal government maintains sufficient supervision and control over the property, we have held that the funds remain government property for purposes of federal prosecution under section 641.
See, e.g., United States v. Wheadon,
This circuit first applied the supervision and control test in United States v. Maxwell, supra. The defendant in that case headed the accounting office at a state junior college, administering the distribution of federal funds in financial aid programs. Department of Health, Education and Welfare funds were held in a bank account in the name of the Illinois Junior College Board. Maxwell authorized deposits of federal funds into this parent account as well as transfers from the parent account to four student financial aid programs. Maxwell was convicted under section 641 of drafting checks to non-existent students and falsifying records to conceal improper transfers from the parent account to the financial aid programs. The issue in that case was whether the funds, which had unquestionably been converted, were “money, or a thing of value of the United States.” Kristofic’s case is, of course, fundamentally different; here, the question is whether Kristofic stole the funds at all, not from whom she stole them. 4
The same is true of our cases following Maxwell cited by the government. For example, in Bailey v. United States, supra, an attorney for the Farmers Home Administration embezzled funds in the form of loan checks which were endorsed by borrowers and turned over to him as loan closing money. The defendant argued that section 641 did not apply because once the borrowers endorsed the checks, they were the borrowers’ property, not the government’s. 5 Again, the question presented was who owned the embezzled property, not whether the defendant had embezzled it. 6
There was a recent application of the supervision and control test in
United States v. Wheadon, supra.
Wheadon, the director of a local housing authority, was charged with embezzling Housing and Urban Development funds. Wheadon maintained that the funds were no longer the property of the United States, but were instead that of the local authority. We held the supervision and control test applicable to determine whether the stolen funds were property of the United States.
Id.
at 1284.
Wheadon
is inapplicable because the SBA funds in question here were not stolen or embezzled. The same analysis also distinguishes the remaining cases upon which the government relies.
See United States v. Brown,
In the supervision and control cases cited by the government, the defendants were involved in the administration of federally-funded programs from which they unquestionably misappropriated funds. We applied the supervision and control test to determine ownership as between the federal government and an organizational “conduit” 7 for federal funds. The government now seeks to apply the same test to determine ownership as between the government and the defendant; that is, to determine whether Kristofic converted the funds at all. But the test was conceived as a means of resolving the jurisdictional question whether the crime committed had been against the federal government. In the case before us, the question of ownership is posed to address a different inquiry altogether: whether Kristofic converted government property or instead merely misapplied her own money in violation of a loan agreement.
In each of the cases the government cites, it exercised supervision and control over its own funds which it had disbursed through local agencies, and in so doing retained a property interest in the funds for some purposes. While the SBA intended to retain control over Kristofic’s loan funds through a loan agreement, that agreement’s restrictions gave the SBA no ownership interest in the proceeds. It is undisputed that Kristofic flagrantly violated the terms of her agreement with the SBA and that her transgressions apparently eluded the SBA’s mechanisms for enforcing loan agreements; but her conduct does not, in a creditor-debtor relationship, support a criminal prosecution for conversion of government property. The government is asking us here to apply section 641 not in a way which merely extends or reinforces the underlying common-law concepts but in a way which flatly contradicts the common law.
One case upon which the government relies may warrant particular attention. In
United States v. Croft,
As the Supreme Court made clear in Morissette, section 641 builds on the common law. The crime of conversion contemplates the deprivation of a property interest. A loan transaction in itself does not confer on the creditor any interest in the debtor’s property. If such an interest is to be acquired, it is usually accomplished through the transfer of a security interest. In addition, there might be a crime against property if a debtor secured a loan intending not to repay it. Lacking any of these or like elements, however, the stuff of conversion is lacking here.
Reversed.
Notes
. 18 U.S.C. § 641 provides:
. The Court also stated that in interpreting the federal conversion statute, courts are to apply the principles governing the common law crime of larceny.
Id.
at 266, n. 28,
. For example, the Court cited The Larceny Act of 1916, 6 & 7 Geo. V., c. 50, and the New York Penal Code, section 1290. The latter defines larceny as wrongfully taking, obtaining or withholding a thing of value "from the possession of the true owner.”
. Although
Maxwell
held that actual title need not remain in the United States, it did require that the United States maintain some property interest in the purloined funds.
. In
Bailey,
we adopted the reasoning of the Fifth Circuit in
United States v. McIntosh,
.In
United States v. Harris,
. The money in those cases was in the hands of government trustees or administrators of local agencies, and never reached those intended to be the ultimate recipients of the funds.
. In the case before us, the loan was, like other such loans, for Kristofic’s commercial benefit. It was not a research grant administered by Kristofic, which she diverted to her own commercial purposes.
