USA v. RYBICKI
00-1043 (L), 00-1044, 00-1052, 00-1055
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit
December 29, 2003
I agree with the majority that the appellants likely forfeited their vagueness challenge, and that the issue is one of plain error. The test for plain error is that there must be (i) error, (ii) that is plain, (iii) that affects substantial rights, and (iv) that seriously affects the fairness, integrity, or public reputation of judicial proceedings. This standard is satisfied here, applying the analysis we employed in United States v. Thomas, 274 F.3d 655, 667 (2d Cir. 2001) (in banc). Certainly, conviction under a statute that is unconstitutionally vague on its face is an error of constitutional magnitude. See United States v. Handakas, 286 F.3d 92, 111-12 (2d Cir.), cert. denied, 537 U.S. 894 (2002). Reaching the merits, I respectfully dissent because in my view the so-called “honest services” amendment to the wire and mail fraud statute,
I
The test for facial invalidity of a criminal statute was articulated by the Supreme Court in 1999: “Vagueness may invalidate a criminal law for either of two independent reasons. First, it may fail to provide the kind of notice that will enable ordinary people to understand what conduct it prohibits; second, it may authorize and even encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.” Id. at 56 (Stevens, J., writing for the Court, joined by Ginsburg and Souter, JJ.); accord id. at 64-65 (O‘Connor, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, joined by Breyer, J.); see also Kolender v. Lawson, 461 U.S. 352, 357 (1983).
The majority opinion states that the governing standard for facial challenges outside of the First Amendment context is to be drawn from United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739 (1987), which states in dicta that a statute is facially invalid only if there is “no set of circumstances” in which it would be valid. Id. at 745. The majority‘s expressed preference for the 1987 Salerno dicta over the 1999 Morales holding is itself a bit of dicta because the majority holds
At most, four Justices in Morales invoked the Salerno test for facial vagueness or words suggestive of that standard. See Morales, 527 U.S. at 77-81 & nn.1-3 (Scalia, J., dissenting); id. at 111-12, 114 (Thomas, J., dissenting, joined by Rehnquist, C.J., and Scalia, J.); id. at 71 (Breyer, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment) (“The ordinance is unconstitutional . . . because the policeman enjoys too much discretion in every case. And if every application of the ordinance represents an exercise of unlimited discretion, then the ordinance is invalid in all its applications.“). In any event, Morales did not implement the Salerno dicta. See id. at 81 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“Instead of requiring respondents, who are challenging the ordinance, to show that it is invalid in all
It is true, of course, that several other propositions discussed in Morales only attracted a plurality. As the majority opinion notes, a three-Justice plurality of the Morales court would apparently allow challenges for facial vagueness outside of the First Amendment context to criminal laws that both lack a mens rea requirement and infringe on constitutional rights. See id. at 55 (Stevens, J., writing for the Court, joined by Ginsburg and Souter, JJ.); [Maj. Op. at 13] However, only those same three Justices believed that the ordinance challenged in Morales implicated such a constitutional right and lacked a specific intent requirement. Compare id. at 55 (Stevens, J., writing for the Court, joined by Ginsburg and Souter, JJ.) (“[The challenged statute] is a criminal law that contains no mens rea requirement and infringes on constitutionally protected rights.“) (internal citations omitted), with id. at 66 (O‘Connor, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, joined by Breyer, J.) (“To be sure, there is no violation of the ordinance unless a person fails to obey
The only proposition attracting a majority in Morales was that a criminal statute that “reach[es] a substantial amount of innocent conduct” and thereby fails to “establish minimal guidelines to govern law enforcement” is, on its
We are therefore required to apply Morales here. Although the majority holds that section 1346 withstands either test, it is quite clear that the statute imposes insufficient constraint on prosecutors, gives insufficient guidance to judges, and affords insufficient notice to defendants. That insufficiency can be illustrated by reference to the cases cited in the majority opinion. As to prosecutors, the majority does not disturb the holding that overturned the conviction in Handakas, 286 F.3d at 96, of a contractor who falsely promised to abide by New York‘s wage laws, on the ground that the “honest services” amendment was vague as applied. The majority opinion thus confirms that the prosecution in Handakas was misguided, or (in my view) that prosecutorial discretion was unguided altogether because the statute insufficiently describes the offense. The majority opinion similarly demonstrates that judges
II
It may be (as the majority holds) that, in enacting section 1346, Congress intended to reinstate a body of case law that had been overruled by the Supreme Court in McNally.
The requirement imposed by the Supreme Court [in McNally] to speak more clearly was not for the benefit of the Circuit Courts which had, in fact, given birth to these concepts in the first place. Rather, the requirement . . . was for the benefit of the public, the average citizen, . . . who must be forewarned and given notice that certain conduct may subject him to federal prosecution.
United States v. Brumley, 116 F.3d 728, 745-46 (5th Cir. 1997) (in banc) (Jolly, J., dissenting) (emphasis added). A statute is unconstitutionally vague unless it provides a “person of ordinary intelligence a reasonable opportunity to know what is prohibited.” United States v. Strauss, 999 F.2d 692, 697 (2d Cir. 1993) (internal quotation marks omitted). We have held that notice is insufficient if lay persons are required to “perform[] the lawyer-like task of statutory interpretation by reconciling the text of [] separate documents.” Chatin v. Coombe, 186 F.3d 82, 89 (2d Cir. 1999) (invalidating a prison administrative prohibition as unconstitutionally vague as applied). Construing a statute (as the majority does here) to say that scores of overruled cases are hereby revived, requires lay persons to
[N]o one can know what is forbidden by
§ 1346 without undertaking the “lawyer-like task” of answering the following questions: [1] Can pre-McNally case law be consulted to illuminate the wording of§ 1346 ? [2] Can any meaning be drawn from the case law, either the uneven pre-McNally cases or the few cases decided post-§ 1346 ? [3] Is one to be guided only by case law within one‘s own circuit, or by the law of the circuits taken together (if that is possible)?
It is remarkable how little the majority‘s search for meaning has turned up. The term of art for which meaning is sought is essentially the entire mouthful of the statute: “scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services.” Before McNally, this phrase encompassed four “categories” of honest-services cases:
[1] government officials who defraud the public of their own honest services; [2] elected officials and campaign workers who falsify votes and thereby defraud the electorate of the right to an honest election; [3] private actors who abuse fiduciary duties by, for example, taking bribes; and [4] private actors who defraud others of certain intangible rights, such as privacy.
Id. at 101-02 (citing McNally, 483 U.S. at 362-64 nn.1-4). Yet the majority‘s search for meaning bears upon no more than one subgroup of the four categories of honest-services
Following an exhaustive, scholarly analysis, my colleagues conclude that one of these four categories of conduct criminalized by pre-McNally case law--the theft of privacy rights--cannot be revived as a criminal offense, presumably because the statute would be unconstitutionally vague under Salerno as well as Morales if so applied. [Maj. Op. at 28-29 n.13] Contra United States v. Condolon, 600 F.2d 7, 8-9 (4th Cir. 1979); United States v. Louderman, 576 F.2d 1383, 1387-88 (9th Cir. 1978). They also limit their search for meaning to cases of “honest services” fraud in the private sector. No attempt is made (advisedly) to describe the prohibition, if any, in the two remaining categories of public sector “honest services” fraud criminalized in the pre-McNally case law; any “well-settled meaning” relating to these remaining categories will presumably be supplied--or looked for--later.
The majority intuits a statutory meaning that is insufficient even to describe the subgroup of private sector cases. Where kickbacks or bribery are involved, the majority holds that a “scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services” means:
a scheme or artifice to use the mails or wires to enable an officer or employee of a private entity (or a person in a relationship that gives rise to a duty of loyalty comparable to that owed by employees to employers) purporting to act for and in the interests of his or her employer (or of the other person to whom the duty of loyalty is owed) secretly to act in his or her or the defendant‘s own interests instead, accompanied by a material misrepresentation made or omission of information disclosed to the employer or other person.
[Maj. Op. at 35-36.] However, in cases of self-dealing, there “may” be an additional requirement that the alleged conduct “caused, or at least was capable of causing, some detriment” to the employer. [Maj. Op. at 38] (emphasis added). The tentativeness of the majority‘s approach is well justified: a number of pre-McNally cases hold that there is no such requirement of economic detriment. See, e.g., United States v. Bronston, 658 F.2d 920, 927 (2d Cir. 1981) (upholding mail fraud conviction against a law firm partner paid for representing a client in contract negotiation despite firm representing competing bidder); see also Rybicki, 287 F.3d at 262 (“[I]t was well-settled law both before and after McNally that the government does not have to establish that a scheme to defraud was successful or resulted in any actual [economic] harm to the victim.“). [Maj. Op. at 36 n. 18.] The majority deems such cases
The majority claims that any ambiguity is of no concern here because defendants’ conduct falls “squarely within the meaning of ‘scheme or artifice to deprive another of the intangible right of honest services’ as distilled from the pre-McNally private sector cases.” [Maj. Op. at 38.] But this argument is no answer to a facial challenge for vagueness. The only relevant question is whether “ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited.” Kolender, 461 U.S. at 357.
It is only too obvious that there is no settled meaning to the phrase “the intangible right of honest services” that is capable of providing constitutionally adequate notice. If there were, the judges and prosecutors in this Circuit would certainly know it. Yet, the majority overrules the holding (erroneously characterized as dicta) in Sancho, 157 F.3d at 922, that pre-McNally case law is irrelevant to determining the meaning of section 1346--i.e., that “the intangible right of honest services” lacks a well settled meaning. The majority also concludes that the panel opinion in this case was wrongly decided insofar as it held that one element of a section 1346 offense is that a loss of money or property be reasonably foreseeable. See Rybicki, 287 F.3d at 265-66. Finally, the majority preserves the holding of Handakas, 286 F.3d at 96, which means that the prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York did not understand what the statute meant. How can the public be expected to know what the statute means when the judges and prosecutors themselves do not know, or must make it up as they go along?
III
The second question that bears on facial vagueness is
The majority opinion affirms the result in Handakas, which means (as I pointed out earlier) that the prosecutors in the Eastern District of New York did not understand what the statute meant. Moreover, the meaning supplied by the
No limit is placed on the exercise of prosecutorial discretion by requiring a showing that an employee secretly prefers her own interest to the interest of the employer; it is naive to assume that this preference is not the most common premise of private employment. “[R]elationships in the private sector generally rest upon concerns and expectations less ethereal and more economic than abstract satisfaction of receiving ‘honest services’ for their own sake.” United States v. Frost, 125 F.3d 346, 365 (6th Cir. 1997). Every salaried employee can be said to work for her own interest while purporting to act in the interests of the employer. Yet the majority opinion effectively makes “dishonesty by an employee, standing alone, [] a crime.”
Nor is prosecutorial discretion limited by the “materiality” requirement See United States v. Sun-Diamond Growers, 138 F.3d 961, 973 (D.C. Cir. 1998) (“Every material act of dishonesty by an employee deprives the employer of that worker‘s ‘honest services,’ yet not every such act is converted into a federal crime by the mere use of the mails or interstate phone system.“); Frost, 125 F.3d at 365 (in rejecting the materiality test: “[I]f a ‘change in business conduct’ occurs under the materiality standard when a business alters its behavior merely to avoid the appearance of impropriety . . . , the intangible right to honest services doctrine may lack substantive limits in the private sector.“) (emphasis in original).
The majority codifies a doctrine that is as standardless as the statute itself. Nothing in the majority opinion prevents criminalization of any of the following conduct: a regulated company that employs a political spouse; an employee who violates an employee code of conduct; a lawyer who provides sky-box tickets to a client‘s general counsel; a trustee who makes a self-dealing investment that pays off; or an officeholder who has made a
The majority is unconcerned with the standardless sweep of the statute because supposedly there is “a wide swath of behavior” for which the prohibitions of section 1346 are “clear.” [Maj. Op. at 40] This statement turns upside down the Morales test for facial vagueness: whether a statute reaches a wide swath of behavior that no one (yet) deems criminal and fails to provide minimal guidance to law enforcement. See Morales, 527 U.S. at 60 (Stevens, J., writing for the majority). “‘It would certainly be dangerous if the legislature could set a net large enough to catch all possible offenders, and leave it to the courts to step inside and say who could be rightfully detained, and who should be set at large.‘” Kolender, 461 U.S. at 358 n.7 (quoting United States v. Reese, 92 U.S. 214, 221 (1875)). I share the confidence implicit in the majority opinion that prosecutors in this Circuit and the Attorney General under whom they serve can be trusted to avoid any systematic abuse of such a statute; but we should construe this statute so that it serves to bind those who nevertheless may need
IV
The majority opinion‘s search for a meaning of art leans heavily on the overruled pre-McNally case law of other circuits. But “[e]ven the circuits that have reinstated pre-McNally law recognize that ad hoc parameters are needed to give the statute shape.” Handakas, 286 F.3d at 109 (collecting cases). Although a number of circuits have upheld section 1346 against a claim of facial vagueness, there is now wide disagreement among the circuits as to the elements of the “honest services” offense. These opinions,
- What mens rea must be proved by the government? The majority follows Second Circuit precedent in holding that an intent to cause economic harm is not required--a defendant need only have intended to deprive another of the “intangible right of honest services.” [Maj. Op. at 43] However, in the Seventh Circuit, an intent to achieve personal gain is an element of the offense. See United States v. Bloom, 149 F.3d 649, 656-57 (7th Cir. 1998). But see United States v. Welch, 327 F.3d 1081, 1106-07 (10th Cir. 2003) (holding that the text and structure of the mail fraud statutes do not support “adding an element” to “honest services” fraud requiring that defendant seek to obtain a personal benefit). The Eight Circuit describes the mens rea element as “caus[ing] or intend[ing] to cause actual harm or injury, and in most
business contexts, that means financial or economic harm.” See United States v. Pennington, 168 F.3d 1060, 1065 (8th Cir. 1999). One circuit has held that, to secure an honest services conviction, “[t]he prosecution must prove that the employee intended to breach a fiduciary duty.” Frost, 125 F.3d at 368. Other circuits merely require a showing of “fraudulent intent.” See United States v. Cochran, 109 F.3d 660, 667 (10th Cir. 1997); United States v. Jain, 93 F.3d 436, 442 (8th Cir. 1996). - Must the defendant have caused actual tangible harm? Compare Jain, 93 F.3d at 442 (“When there is no tangible harm to the victim of a private scheme, it is hard to discern what intangible ‘rights’ have been violated.“), with Frost, 125 F.3d at 369 (“[A] defendant accused of scheming to deprive another of honest services does not have to intend to inflict an economic harm upon the victim.“). Some circuits have required that the
misrepresentation be material, i.e., that the employee have reason to believe that the information would lead a reasonable employer to change its business conduct. See Cochran, 109 F.3d at 667 & n.3; United States v. Gray, 96 F.3d 769, 775 (5th Cir. 1996); Jain, 93 F.3d at 442. Other circuits only require a showing that it was reasonably foreseeable for the victim to suffer economic harm. Frost, 125 F.3d at 368; Sun-Diamond Growers, 138 F.3d at 973-74. We adopted this last requirement in the Rybicki panel opinion, and now abandon it. See Rybicki, 287 F.3d at 265. - What is the duty that must be breached to violate section 1346? The majority holds that it is the duty owed by an employee to an employer, or by “a person in a relationship that gives rise to a duty of loyalty comparable to that owed by employees to employers” (whatever that means). [Maj Op. at 34-35] Some circuits only allow prosecutions for breach of an employee‘s duty to an
employer. See, e.g., Brumley, 116 F.3d at 735. Other circuits require the breach of a fiduciary duty. See Frost, 125 F.3d at 366, 368; Sun-Diamond Growers, 138 F.3d at 974. - Is the source of that duty state or federal law? The majority does not say, and other circuits are split. Compare Frost, 125 F.3d at 366 (“Federal law governs the existence of fiduciary duty under the mail fraud statute.” (emphasis added)), with Brumley, 116 F.3d at 735 (“We have held that services under
§ 1346 are those an employee must provide the employer under state law.” (emphasis added)). - Did section 1346 revive pre-McNally case law; if so must each circuit look to its own governing precedent or to some set of rules distilled from the whole body of pre-McNally cases? See Brumley, 116 F.3d at 733-34 (looking to “plain language” of a statute to discern its “meaning” because “before McNally the doctrine of honest services was not a unified set of rules [a]nd Congress could not
have intended to bless each and every pre-McNally lower court ‘honest services’ opinion“); Frost, 125 F.3d at 364, 365 (holding that ” § 1346 has restored the mail fraud statute to its pre-McNally scope, according to previous opinions interpreting the intangible right to honest services” and looking to “Sixth Circuit precedent issued before McNally in order to discover the precise contours of the right in this circuit“). In Sancho, we held that pre-McNally cases could not be considered in determining the meaning of the statute. See 157 F.3d at 921-22. We now overrule Sancho and adopt an approach divining statutory meaning by analyzing cases overruled by McNally as a whole.
In sum, the circuits are fractured on the basic issues: (1) the requisite mens rea to commit the crime, (2) whether the defendant must cause actual tangible harm, (3) the duty that must be breached, (4) the source of that duty, and (5) which body of law informs us of the statute‘s meaning. This
V
As the foregoing section documents, the vagueness of the statute has induced court after court to undertake a rescue operation by fashioning something that (if enacted) would withstand a vagueness challenge. The felt need to do that attests to the constitutional weakness of section 1346 as written. And the result of all these efforts--which has been to create different prohibitions and offenses in different circuits--confirms that the weakness is fatal. Judicial invention cannot save a statute from unconstitutional vagueness; courts should not try to fill out a statute that makes it an offense to “intentionally cause harm to another,” or to “stray from the straight and narrow,” or to fail to render “honest services.”
“[L]egislatures and not courts should define criminal activity.” United States v. Bass, 404 U.S. 336, 348 (1971); see also Handakas, 286 F.3d at 101 (punishment for
The majority complacently cites by analogy similarly vague words in the Sherman Act that make unlawful any “restraint of trade.” [Maj. Op. at 27] The Sherman Act predates Morales by a century. Moreover, the comparison proves too much. Courts construe the Sherman Act primarily as a civil and regulatory statute, and criminal Sherman Act prosecutions have long been limited essentially to price-fixing. In keeping with its exceptional history, courts have broadly construed the Sherman Act as “a charter of
Finally, “[t]he absence of discernible standards in the ‘honest services’ doctrine implicates principles of federalism.” Handakas, 286 F.3d at 110. The majority opinion in effect criminalizes all material acts of dishonesty by employees or by persons who owe analogous duties. While the majority opinion concerns itself only with private sector “honest services” fraud, there seems to
I believe that Congress has not heeded the Supreme Court‘s admonition to “speak more clearly than it has.” See id. We should not “approve a sweeping expansion of federal criminal jurisdiction in the absence of a clear statement by Congress.” Cleveland v. United States, 531 U.S. 12, 24 (2000).
The majority opinion exhibits deference to Congress by conscientiously seeking to understand congressional intent, and the effort and product are scholarly and scrupulous. But the work accomplished by the majority opinion, which is admirable in its way, is properly the work of legislators in
