UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. HUNTINGTON NATIONAL BANK, Defendant-Appellant.
No. 08-1729
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit
July 27, 2009
09a0267p.06
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. Argued: April 20, 2009. Decided and Filed: July 27, 2009. Before: BOGGS, Chief Judge; MOORE and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Jeffrey O. Birkhold, WARNER NORCROSS & JUDD LLP, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Mаtthew G. Borgula, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Jeffrey O. Birkhold, John J. Bursch, Gaëtan Gerville-Réache, WARNER NORCROSS & JUDD LLP, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellant. Matthew G. Borgula, ASSISTANT UNITED STATES ATTORNEY, Grand Rapids, Michigan, for Appellee.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. At stake in this appeal is whether Huntington National Bank forfeited its right to arguе that it was a bona fide purchaser for value in a criminal forfeiture action filed by the United States. We hold that it did not, and we therefore reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
A.
Federal law allows third parties to assert an interest in property subject to criminal forfeiture to the United States.
B.
Between 2002 and 2004, the leaders of several companies collectively known as CyberNET defrauded morе than 40 lending institutions of more than $100 million. During these years, Huntington extended a multimillion-dollar line of credit to CyberCo Holdings, Inc., one of the CyberNET companies. As collateral for the line of credit and other liabilities, CyberCo granted Huntington a security interest in nearly all of its assets. One such asset was a bank account CyberCo opened with Huntington, into which CyberCo deposited receipts of the fraud.
In November 2004, the federal government seized ten CyberNET bank accounts at eight different banks, including CyberCo‘s account at Huntington. Complaint at 1, United States v. One Huntingtоn Nat‘l Bank Account No. 01159630935 in the Amount of $705,168.60, No. 1:05-CV-61 (W.D. Mich. Jan. 24, 2005). The government eventually sought criminal forfeiture of the Huntington account. After the CyberNET principals agreed to forfeit their interests in the account, the district court entered a preliminary order transferring the account to the Unitеd States.
Huntington filed a claim, alleging that a perfected security interest permitted it to retain the account. The district court set a hearing to resolve the validity of Huntington‘s
The district court denied Huntington‘s claim under
II.
This appeal presents onе issue: Did Huntington forfeit its bona fide purchaser argument? We give clear-error review to the district court‘s factual assessment of what happened below and, as the parties agree, we give de novo review to its conclusion that the argument was forfeited. Seе United States ex rel. A+ Homecare, Inc. v. Medshares Mgmt. Group, Inc., 400 F.3d 428, 447 (6th Cir. 2005).
A forfeiture claimant may obtain relief on one of two grounds: that its interest is “superior” to the government‘s or that it was a “bona fide purchaser for value.”
The question is whether Huntington adequately preserved thе second ground for relief in one of these ways: (1) It included a footnote in its merits brief to the district court, which explained that, while it was not relying on the bona fide purchaser argument at that point, it reserved the right to do so later; (2) it orally raised—and relied on—the bona fidе purchaser argument at the forfeiture hearing; and (3) it raised the bona fide purchaser argument in its motion for reconsideration.
Had Huntington tried to preserve its argument in these ways at the court of appeals, it would face an uphill climb. Generally speaking: (1) a рarty does not preserve an
Should, however, the same rule apply to district court proceedings? In at least two respects, the same approach governs trials. There, too, a litigant does not preserve an issue merely by adverting to the possibility that it may mentiоn the argument later. To “raise” an argument, a litigant must provide some minimal argumentation in favor of it. See Bldg. Serv. Local 47 Cleaning Contractors Pension Plan v. Grandview Raceway, 46 F.3d 1392, 1398–99 (6th Cir. 1995). Not only did Huntington‘s footnote fail to do that, but the bank expressly disclaimed making the argument, saying it “w[ould] nоt address its status [as] a bona fide purchaser,” ROA I at 462 n.6. Likewise, absent a legitimate excuse, an argument raised for the first time in a motion for reconsideration at the district court generally will be forfeited. See Scottsdale Ins. Co. v. Flowers, 513 F.3d 546, 553 (6th Cir. 2008).
The key question, then, is whether raising an issue for the first time at a district сourt hearing ought to be treated the same as raising it for the first time at an appellate oral argument. We think not—at least as a general rule—because the two settings often have little in common. Some trial-level proceedings do not contemplatе pre-hearing briefs; some do not require them; and it is the exception, not the rule, to establish a rigid three-stage briefing schedule in the district court. See 5 Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 1192 (3d ed. 2004) (noting that
In view of these precedents, we cannot dispose of this case solely on the ground that Huntington raised its bona fide purchaser argument for the first time at the hearing. We must consider how the bank presented the argument at the hearing and whether that sufficed. Although we have not “articulated precisely” what a party must do (or how much it must say) in the district court to “raise” an argument, Scottsdale, 513 F.3d at 553, we have identified some guideposts. At a minimum, a litigant must state the issue with sufficient clarity to give the court and opposing parties notice that it is asserting the issue. Id. at 552; Barner v. Pilkington N. Am., Inc., 399 F.3d 745, 749 (6th Cir. 2005). Yet notice by itself does not suffice. Otherwise, a litigant could preserve an issue merely by summarily mentioning it, and we know that conclusory allegations and perfunctory statements, unaccompanied by citations or some effort at legal argument, do not meet this standard. See Bldg. Serv. Local 47, 46 F.3d at 1398–99; Tele-Comm., Inc. v. Comm‘r of Internal Revenue, 104 F.3d 1229, 1233 (10th Cir. 1997). To preserve the argument, then, the litigant not only must identify the issue but also must provide some minimal level of аrgumentation in support of it.
The district court concluded that Huntington did not satisfy these requirements, and we have some sympathy for its position. The court was presiding over a massive fraud involving multiple victims and multiple stakeholders. By the time of the hearing, the court had consolidаted the criminal-forfeiture case with a related civil-forfeiture case, and the district court faced a number of parties claiming an interest in the remaining assets of CyberNET. Fifteen financial institutions and two bankruptcy trustees filed claim petitions
Still, we cannot say that this sequence of events amounted to a forfeiture of the bona fide purchaser argument. Huntington argued that it was a bona fide purchaser at the forfeiture hearing, and its statements cleared the notice and level-of-argumentation hurdles needed to preserve the issue. In addition to stating repeatedly that it was a “bona fide purchaser” under the criminal forfeiture statute, ROA II at 31–34, Huntington identified each element of the claim and explаined why it satisfied each one: Huntington explained that (1) its security interest gave it a “right, title, or interest” in the Huntington account, id. at 23; (2) it in good faith “purchased its security interest,” id. at 31; and (3) it paid “value” for its security interest in the form of “the loans it made to CyberCo,” id. See
Other circumstancеs support this conclusion. The district court did not order the parties to file briefs before the forfeiture hearing; it merely gave them the option of doing so. Had Huntington chosen not to file a brief, in other words, no forfeiture issue would have
Nor does the government argue that this is a case where it needed advance notice of Huntington‘s bona fide purchaser argument in order to prepare relevant witnesses or evidence. The government, indeed, conceded awаy the only issue on which such testimony or evidence could have been relevant here: whether Huntington had “cause to believe that the property was subject to forfeiture.”
Strict forfeiture rules also apply awkwardly to
Because the district court held that Huntington forfeited this argument, it did not reach the merits of it. Rather than decide for ourselves whether Huntington qualifies as a bona fide purchaser for value under
III.
For these reasons, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
