OPINION AND ORDER
Barry Jewell has again filed a motion asking the Court to order the government to release the
lis pendens
notice filed by the government giving notice that it claims an interest in Jewell’s residence, which is owned in the name of Barry J. Jewell and Heather M. Jewell, Trustees of the Barry J. Jewell and Heather M. Jewell Living Revocable Trust. Earlier in this case, Jewell filed a motion asking the Court to strike the notice of
lis pendens
on the grounds that the notice constituted a pretrial restraint of substitute property, which is not authorized by 21 U.S.C. § 853(e). The Court denied that motion because a notice of
lis pendens
provides no legal restraint.
United States v. Jewell,
I.
The indictment charges that Barry Jewell conspired with Bobby Keith Moser to commit mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. The indictment also charges Jewell with three counts of money laundering and one count of tax evasion. A forfeiture allegation is included with reference to *964 each of the counts except the tax evasion count. The first forfeiture allegation, which is the one at issue here, seeks forfeiture of $1,811,490.20 as representing the proceeds obtained as a result of the conspiracy to commit mail fraud. The forfeiture allegation gives notice of the government’s intent to seek substitute property pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(p) in the event that the $1.8 million in cash cannot be located upon the exercise of due diligence; has been transferred or sold to, or deposited with, a third party; has been placed beyond the jurisdiction of the court; has been substantially diminished in value; or has been commingled with other property which cannot be divided without difficulty. The forfeiture of substitute property is sought pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(p) as incorporated by 18 U.S.C. § 982(b). The allegation regarding substitute property says that the government will seek forfeiture of properties of Jewell up to the $1.8 million amount including, but not limited to, his place of residence.
Shortly after the grand jury returned the indictment, the government filed a notice of lis pendens with the Circuit/County Clerk of Pulaski County identifying Jewell’s residence and stating, “The subject real property is a substitute asset which may be forfeited to satisfy the money judgment set forth in Forfeiture Allegation I.” After Jewell filed the present motion arguing that the lis pendens statute does not authorize the filing of a notice of lis pendens in actions seeking money judgment, the government filed another notice of lis pendens identifying Jewell’s residence and stating:
The subject real property will be forfeited upon defendant’s conviction of Count I of the indictment if all property constituting or deriving from proceeds obtained directly or indirectly as a violation of Count I of the indictment in the case identified herein cannot be located upon the exercise of due diligence; has been transferred or sold to, or deposited with, a third party; has been placed beyond the jurisdiction of the court; has been substantially diminished in value; or ... has been commingled with other property which cannot be divided without difficulty.
II.
The two notices of lis pendens filed by the government were filed pursuant to Ark.Code Ann. section 16-59-101, which provides:
To render the filing of any suit at law or in equity in either a state court or a United States district court affecting the title or any lien on real estate or personal property constructive notice to a bona fide purchaser or mortgagee of any such real estate or personal property, it shall be necessary for the plaintiff ... or his or her attorney or agent to file a notice of the pendency of the suit, for record with the recorder of deeds of the county in which the property to be affected by the constructive notice is situated.
It is well settled in Arkansas that the
lis pendens
statute does not apply to an action seeking only a money judgment because, by its terms, the statute applies only to actions affecting title to or any lien on real estate or personal property.
Health Betterment Found, v. Thomas,
The issue, then, is whether the government can use the Arkansas
lis pendens
statute in a criminal forfeiture proceeding in which the government seeks the forfeiture of money that represents the proceeds of criminal activity and identifies real property as substitute property to be forfeited in the event that the money cannot be recovered for one of the reasons stated in 21 U.S.C. § 853(p)(l). In
United States v. Jarvis,
The government concedes that the lis pendens statute does not authorize the filing of a lis pendens to encumber property to satisfy a potential money judgment but nevertheless argues that Jarvis was wrongly decided. The government argues that the Tenth Circuit in Jarvis mistakenly failed to distinguish between an order to forfeit substitute property and a money judgment, which, the government says, is the same mistake its attorneys made when they filed the first notice of lis pendens in this case. The government also argues that the Jarvis opinion is wrong in its holding that the government’s interest in substitute property does not relate back to the time of the commission of the crime.
On the first argument, the government notes that entry of a money judgment is not a required predicate to the forfeiture of substitute property. The government also says that the forfeiture of substitute property and the entry of money judgments are separate remedies that spring from independent sources inasmuch as the authority to order the forfeiture of substitute property is found in section 853(p), whereas the authority to enter a forfeiture order in the form of a money judgment is based upon judicial interpretation of section 853(a). Thus, the government says, because they are derived from separate sources, the forfeiture of substitute property and the entry of a forfeiture order in the form of a money judgment are separate remedies not dependent on each other. While all of that may be true, the fact remains that what the government seeks in the first forfeiture allegation in the indictment is money — “$1,811,490.20, representing the amount of proceeds obtained as a result of the offense of conspiracy to commit mail fraud, as alleged in Count 1.” If the government obtains a conviction on Count 1 a forfeiture order in the form of a money judgment may be entered in that amount pursuant to 21 U.S.C. § 853(a).
1
*966
Even if the forfeiture order does not use the term “money judgment” or “judgment,” the substance of an
in personam
order directing the forfeiture of a sum of money can hardly be distinguished, so far as the
lis pendens
statute is concerned, from a money judgment. It is true, of course, that the authority to enter an
in personam
order directing the forfeiture of the proceeds of criminal activity derives from section 853(a), whereas the authority to order the forfeiture of substitute property arises from section 853(p), but that distinction is parallel to rather than inconsistent with the fact that in civil cases the rule authorizing entry of a judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 54, is separate from the rule authorizing seizure of property to satisfy the money judgment, Fed.R.CivP. 69. Here, if Jewell is convicted on Count 1, the government may obtain an
in personam
forfeiture order requiring Jewell to forfeit $1,811,490.20. If Jewell pays that amount from cash on hand, liquid assets, or money borrowed from friends, relatives, or a bank, the issue of whether the residence should be forfeited as substitute property under section 853(p) will never arise. If he is convicted, a forfeiture order is entered, and he is unable to pay the amount that he is ordered to forfeit, then and only then will the Court consider whether to order the forfeiture of substitute property under section 853(p). Substitute properties to be forfeited under section 853(p) need not be identified until that stage of the case because “their specific identity does not matter for forfeiture purposes.”
United States v. Hatcher,
This comparison between substitute property in this case, where the government seeks forfeiture of a sum of money as proceeds of a criminal act, and a civil case in which a plaintiff seeks money damages, assumes that the government’s interest in substitute property does not relate back to the time of the criminal act, which of course the government disputes. The government argues that its interest in substitute property does relate back to the time of the criminal act. The only circuit to hold that the relation back doctrine applies to substitute property and that title to substitute property vests in the government as of the date of the offense is the Fourth Circuit.
See In re Bryson,
The statute providing for the government’s interest in forfeitable assets to relate back to the date of the criminal act is 21 U.S.C. § 853(c), which provides, in pertinent part, “All right, title, and interest in property described in subsection (a) of this section vests in the United States upon the commission of the act giving rise to forfeiture under this section.” Subsection (a), as noted above, is the provision that mandates forfeiture of proceeds of criminal acts and property used to commit criminal acts. Section 853(c) does not say that all right, title, and interest described in subsection (p) vests in the United States upon the commission of the criminal act.
While the Eighth Circuit has not ruled on the issue of whether the government’s interest in substitute property relates back to the date of the criminal act, it has ruled upon a nearly identical issue of statutory construction. Section 853(e)(1) authorizes a pretrial restraining order or injunction “to preserve the availability of property described in subsection (a) of this section for forfeiture.... ” In
United States v. Field,
the government argued that the district court erred in vacating a pretrial order restraining the defendant from dissipating substitute property. The Eighth Circuit held that the plain language of section 853(e) authorized pretrial restraint only of property described in section 853(a) and, by its terms, gives the court no authority to authorize pretrial restraint of substitute property described in section 853(p).
Field,
In summary, the Arkansas
lis pendens
statute does not permit the filing of a notice of
lis pendens
in a ease in which the plaintiffs only potential interest in real property is the possibility that the real property may be needed to satisfy a money judgment if the plaintiff prevails on the merits and obtains a judgment that the defendant does not satisfy. The government’s interest in Jewell’s residence is in substance the same interest that the plaintiff in a civil case has in real property that may be needed to satisfy a money judgment. If the government prevails on the merits, and if the government obtains an
in personam
forfeiture order requiring Jewell to forfeit the proceeds obtained
*968
from the conspiracy to commit mail fraud, then the government may pursue an order directing Jewell to forfeit his residence as substitute property under section 853(p). If the government’s interest in substitute property related back to the date of the criminal act, it might be said that the government has a present interest that would permit the filing of a notice of
Us pendens,
but section 853(c) provides only that the government’s interest in property described in subsection (a) vests at the time the criminal act is committed, and neither that statute nor any other provides that the government’s interest in substitute property vests at the time the criminal act is committed. Unlike property forfeitable under section 853(a), Jewell’s residence is nothing more than “a potential asset source that may be used to satisfy a shortfall in a potential money judgment.”
Kramer,
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, Jewell’s motion to release property is GRANTED. Documents # 84 and # 98. The government is hereby ordered to remove the Us pendens giving notice that it claims an interest in Jewell’s residence and to do so forthwith.
Notes
.
United. States v. Vampire Nation,
