The Supreme Court has directed us to give further consideration to the felony convictions of William Conover and Anthony Tanner. In reviewing our opinion at
I. Proceedings
It has been nearly five years since Con-over and Tanner were indicted. Their first trial ended with a hung jury and a mistrial. They were reindicted; the first count alleged a conspiracy to defraud the United States in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, and the second through fifth counts alleged distinct acts of federal mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. While Conover was found guilty on all counts, Tanner also was found guilty on all counts except the third count. We affirmed each of the convictions.
The Supreme Court granted certiorari at 479 U.S.-,
II. Paragraph 14 and the Alternate Theory of Conspiracy
The question before us now is whether the conspiracy convictions can stand on the basis of the Government’s alternate theory alleged in Paragraph 14 of Count One of the indictment. Paragraph 14 reads:
It was further a part of the conspiracy that the defendants would and did cause Seminole Electric to falsely state and represent to the Rural Electrification Administration that an REA-approved competitive bidding procedure had been followed in awarding the access road construction contracts.
The defendants have suggested that the convictions cannot stand because (1) there was no evidence to establish guilt on this theory, and (2) the jury was not instructed on this theory. The Government argues that the evidence shows that Conover and Tanner conspired to cause Seminole to make false representations to the REA regarding compliance with REA-approved bidding procedures on the fill and spreading contracts.
There is some evidence which indicates that Conover and Tanner caused Seminole to make misrepresentations to the REA concerning bidding procedures. For instance, an REA employee testified about REA’s reliance on and approval of the contracts based on information submitted by Conover and Seminole. In addition, there is testimony that Conover and Seminole certified to the REA that the roads had been completed in accordance with the contracts, when in truth some of the fill materials did not meet specifications. It is evident that Conover and Tanner manipulated Seminole into making misrepresentations to the REA based on corrupt bidding procedures regarding both procurement processes.
However, we are mindful that just before the re-trial the Government dismissed Count Six which charged the defendants with essentially the same conduct as charged in Paragraph 14. We also have learned that the jury was not instructed covering Paragraph 14 of the § 371 conspiracy count. The Government’s alternate theory of the substantive count that Con-over and Tanner conspired to induce Seminole to make misrepresentations to the REA clearly must be rejected because (1) the Government dismissed Count Six, a nearly identical charge before the re-trial, thus showing its lack of proof or lack of foresight on this point, (2) the Government in fact failed to offer sufficient evidence on the alternate theory at trial, and (3) the Government even failed to receive or request a jury instruction on the alternate theory of conspiracy. Without sufficient evidence, without any showing that the Government proceeded on the alternate theory of conspiracy, and without an instruction to the jury on the alternate theory, the jury could not have based its verdict on that charge and thus the § 371 conspiracy convictions must be reversed.
See Screws v. United States,
III. McNally and the Mail Fraud Convictions
The Supreme Court also has asked us to consider the defendants’ contention that the evidence did not establish a scheme to defraud Seminole under the federal mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341. In our earlier opinion we decided to pretermit discussion on this issue. We affirmed the mail fraud convictions on the basis that the evidence established the use of the mails in connection with the § 371 violation alleged in Count One.
Conover and Tanner recommend that we need not consider whether the evidence established a scheme to defraud Seminole because the Court's recent
McNally
opinion protects them from being convicted of the offense of mail fraud. In
McNally v. United States,
the Court held that “[t]he mail fraud statute clearly protects property rights, but does not refer to the intangible right of the citizenry to good government.”
*269
— U.S.-,
The indictment against Conover and Tanner failed to charge that Seminole was defrauded of money or property. The relevant portion of the indictment states:
COUNT TWO
1. Beginning in or about January, 1980, and continuing to in or about January, 1982, at Tampa and Crystal River, in the Middle District of Florida and elsewhere,
WILLIAM M. CONOVER and ANTHONY R. TANNER,
defendants herein, knowingly devised and intended to devise a scheme and artifice to defraud:
(a) the United States by impeding, impairing, obstructing and defeating the lawful function of the Rural Electrification Administration in its administration and enforcement of its guaranteed loan program; and
(b) Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc., of its right to have its process and procedures for the procurement of materials, equipment and services run honestly and free from deceit, corruption and fraud, and of its right to the honest and faithful services of its employees.
Although Seminole has been defrauded of “its right to the honest and faithful services of its employees,” McNally teaches that this may not be sufficient to sustain a federal mail fraud conviction. In this novel approach the Court has thinned most circuits’ broad readings of the mail fraud statute.
The Government alleged in
McNally
that a public official’s kickback scheme to defraud involved political influence over governmental insurance business to the petitioners’ insurance companies. — U.S. -,
[Tjhere was no charge and the jury was not required to find that the Commonwealth itself was defrauded of any money or property. It was not charged that in the absence of the alleged scheme the Commonwealth would have paid a lower premium or secured better insurance.... Although the Government now relies in part on the assertion that the petitioners obtained property by means of false representations ... there was nothing in the jury charge that required such a finding. We hold, therefore, that the jury instruction on the substantive mail fraud count permitted a conviction for conduct not within the reach of § 1341.
Id. The Court noticed that under existing law the jury could find that the petitioners had breached a fiduciary duty of failing to disclose their conflict of interest, thereby depriving the public of its right to a fair and honest government. The Court ultimately decided to vacate the McNally convictions because the right to honest and faithful service was an interest too ethereal in itself to fall within the purview of the federal mail fraud statute.
Similarly, Conover and Tanner urge that the indictment against them did not charge and the jury instructions did not require a finding that Seminole was defrauded of money or property. The relevant portion of the jury charge provides:
Counts Two through Five of the indictment contain allegations that defendant Conover intentionally breached his fiduciary duty to Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc. and that defendant Tanner knowingly and willfully aided and abetted defendant Conover in the breach of this fiduciary duty.
The term “fiduciary duty” refers to the nature of the legal obligation which a *270 corporate officer or employee owes to his employer. Unless it is modified by specific agreement between the employer and the employee, an employee’s fiduciary obligation under the law is to act honestly and faithfully in all of his dealings with his employer, including a duty to make a full and fair disclosure to the employer of any personal interest or profit which the employee expects to derive or has derived from any transaction in which he participates in the course of his employment.
A violation of the employee’s duty to disclose material information to the employer can constitute an illegal scheme to defraud under the mail fraud statute only if there is evidence of some detriment to the employer.
Information is material in this sense whenever an employee has reason to believe the information would make a bargaining difference to the employer or lead a reasonable employer to change its business conduct and the duty to disclose is violated by either active concealment or affirmative misrepresentation and deception or by the receipt of so-called bribes or kickbacks.
A “bribe” is defined as the corrupt giving of a thing of value to another to improperly induce or influence that person’s action. A “kickback” is defined as a payment to an individual for dealing in the course of his employment with the person making the payment with the result that his personal financial interest interferes with his duty to secure the most favorable bargain for his employer.
A lapse of a fiduciary duty owed by an employee to an employer does not in and of itself amount to a violation of the mail fraud statute. A breach of a fiduciary duty owed by an employee to an employer can only constitute a violation of the mail fraud statute if the government proves beyond a reasonable doubt that there is some detriment to the employer caused by such a breach of a fiduciary duty.
So, in this instance, if you find beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant under consideration acted in the manner described in the indictment and that he breached a fiduciary duty he owed to his employer (or aided and abetted another defendant in so doing with the result that the employer was deprived of its employee’s honest and faithful service and suffered detriment as described above); and if you further find that the defendant under consideration did such acts knowingly and willfully (as those terms are hereafter defined), then you may also find, that such a deliberate breach of a fiduciary duty with resulting detriment constituted a “scheme to defraud” as to the alleged victim Seminole Electric Cooperative, Inc., as that term has been used in these instructions.
Conover and Tanner refer us to the language that the jury merely was instructed that it must find a “detriment” to Seminole. The only “detriment” articulated in the charge was the duty of an employee “to make a full and fair disclosure to the employer of any personal interest or profit which the employee expects to derive or has derived from any transaction in which he participates in the course of his employment.” The Government responds with a reference to the jury charge which states that Conover breached a “fiduciary duty” to his employer, Seminole. The charge also discusses the meaning of the terms “bribe” and “kickback” as it relates to Conover’s “fiduciary duty.” The Government asserts that this instruction is the “functional equivalent of an instruction” requiring a finding that the scheme was calculated to deprive Seminole of money or property.
See United States v. Ballard,
In
Ballard,
the Fifth Circuit stated in
dicta
that “in an unregulated market, the detriment necessary for a finding of mail fraud ... would be shown by mere receipt of kickbacks.”
On the basis of McNally, it is inferable that to sustain the convictions in this case, the Government would have to offer proof and the jury would have to be instructed that Seminole would have paid less for the road or received a higher quality road. These points were not brought out at the trial. There was some testimony that Seminole paid a slightly higher price for Tanner’s sand filling. However, it is not evident in the indictment or in the charge that Seminole paid a higher price for the patrol road, or that the patrol road was constructed improperly. Additionally, there is no instruction providing that Conover’s compromise of his company’s interests caused losses of money or tangible property to Seminole.
Finally, we are not persuaded that
Carpenter v. United States,
— U.S.-,
This case is similar to that of
United States v. Italiano,
In essence, this charge is not materially different from that rejected by the Court in
McNally
or this court in
Italiano.
The jury instruction allowed the jury to convict the defendants upon a finding either that the “detriment” to Seminole was the unfaithful service of Conover or the payment of a “bribe” or “kickback.”
See Sandstrom v. Montana,
IV. Conclusion
Conover and Tanner have had good fortune shine on them. At the time they acted for their personal gain their actions were clearly unlawful. The law is an ever-changing body, however. The Government’s attorneys cannot be blamed for proceeding as they did given the state of the law. The § 371 and § 1341 convictions are REVERSED and the judgments are VACATED.
