Albert Malvino v. Paul Delluniversita

840 F.3d 223, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18952, 2016 WL 6127527
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedOctober 20, 2016
Docket15-41435
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 840 F.3d 223 (Albert Malvino v. Paul Delluniversita) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Albert Malvino v. Paul Delluniversita, 840 F.3d 223, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18952, 2016 WL 6127527 (5th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

GREGG COSTA, Circuit Judge:

As she approached retirement, Bonnie Pereida spent hundreds of thousands of dollars on rare coins. She thought the coins would be a good hedge against inflation. After she passed away, an appraisal revealed that her coin collection included a counterfeit coin, damaged coins, -and coins worth far less than expected. It turned out that the majority owner of the company that sold her the coins also owned the company that acted as a purportedly independent grader of the coins, and the grades it had assigned did not reflect the coins' value.

The executor of Pereida’s estate sued and obtained a $1,610,802 judgment on claims brought -under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). This appeal requires us to decide two questions: 1) did the RICO claim survive Pereida’s death?; and 2) did the evidence establish the pattern of criminal conduct that RICO requires?

Although we conclude that Pereida’s RICO claims survived, Malvino did not prove a pattern of racketeering activity at trial. We therefore reverse the judgment and remand for further proceedings as to state law claims on which -the district court did not enter judgment.

I

During the first five months of 2011, Pereida made 31 purchases from PCA Collectibles, Inc. acquiring 135 coins for $727,569. Pereida was not an expert in numismatics, the study or collection of rare and valuable coins. Coins are valued according to rarity and condition. Rarity is based on “mintage,” the number of coins originally minted, as well as the number that have survived. The same rare coin’s value can vary wildly based on condition. So collectors have adopted a grading scale. They use descriptors such as “MS” for “mint state” (meaning original condition), or “AU” for “about uncirculated” (meaning very little wear- from use).- A numeric scale running from -one to seventy makes finer distinctions. A coin graded AU50 is slightly more damaged -than a coin graded AU55. An MS70 is in perfect condition. Collectors, especially unsophisticated collectors, rely on these grades to determine coins’ value. Numismatics is unregulated, however, and whether a grade actually reflects a coin’s value depends on whether the grade was assigned consistent with industry standards.

PCA is a rare coins dealer owned by Anthony Delluniversita and his son, Paul Delluniversita. Paul, who owns 40% of PCA, serves as its president, but in practice his sole job is ensuring that sales representatives are on the phone making sales; Anthony, who owns 60%, manages all other operations, including training salespeople and setting coin prices.

Each coin PCA sold Pereida came with an invoice that showed the grade as determined by “independent third party” grader PCI Coin Grading, Inc. Anthony, how *227 ever, owned and operated PCI, which he had purchased in November 2010. He was also PCI’s sole coin grader, although he had no formal training in numismatics. For each coin PCA sold to Pereida, Anthony had purchased it, through PCA, in'a “raw,” or ungraded, state and personally assigned it a PCI grade. Just over a year after he purchased the company, Anthony sold PCI in late 2011.

Pereida passed away in October 2011. Her former flaneé, Albert Malvino, became executor of her estate. Malvino had the coin collection appraised for tax purposes by Heritage Auction Appraisal Services, a leading coin valuation company. Heritage determined that the fair market value of the PCA coins was only $190,865, or 26.2% of the amount Pereida paid. Heritage found that PCI overgraded coins, failed' to identify a counterfeit coin, and improperly graded “cleaned” 1 coins. Malvino then retained Paul Montgomery, an experienced coin grader, for a second opinion. Montgomery found the collection was worth $150,964 at the time of purchase, or 20.8% of what Pereida paid. Like Heritage, he found patterns of overgrading and selective overgrading to take advantage of significant changes in valuation for small grade variances. 2 Montgomery graded all of Pereida’s coins lower than PCI did. Like Heritage, he identified a counterfeit coin and twenty five coins that were ungradáble because they were cleaned or damaged. Montgomery sought another opinion from the Professional Coin Grading Service, which confirmed his conclusion (and that of Heritage) that the coins were worth about half a million dollars less than what Perei-da paid.

Malvino filed suit against Anthony and Paul, PCA, and PCI, asserting a substantive civil RICO violation predicated on mail fraud and wire:fraud; conspiracy to violate RICO; various state common law claims including fraud,- fraudulent concealment, and negligent misrepresentation; civil conspiracy to commit the state common law violations; and violations of the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act.

After a bench trial,, the district' court dismissed the Texas Deceptive Trade Practices Act claims- on the ground that they did not survive Pereida’s death. The court ruled in Malvino’s favor, however, on the fraud, negligent misrepresentation, and civil conspiracy claims asserted against PCA and PCI, and held Anthony personally responsible for damages associated with the claims. 3 For these common law claims, the court found economic damages of $536,934 and exemplary damages in the same amount.

The court also found Anthony and PCA liable under both the substantive and conspiracy provisions of civil RICO. It held that'these claims survived Pereida’s death, reasoning that RICO is primarily a remedial statute. Under RICO’s treble damages provision, the court calculated damages in the amount of $1,610,802. 4 It also noted *228 that RICO allows a prevailing, plaintiff to recover attorneys’ fees, which totaled $280,190.

Although it calculated damages for the common law claims and the federal statutory ones, the district court concluded that Texas’s one satisfaction rule' did not allow for recovery under both. It therefore asked Malvino to elect between the two. Malvino sought to recover the RICO damages against Anthony and PCA, and damages for the - common law claims against PCI, but the district court found this would impermissibly allow a double recovery. It thus entered judgment only on the RICO claims, against Anthony and PCA.

Defendants moved for a new trial, contending, among other things, that Malvino did not prove they had “engaged in illegal activity over a sufficient period of time to be considered ‘racketeering activity’ for purposes of RICO.” The district court denied that motion, and the Defendants appealed. 5

II

Defendants, first argue that a RICO claim does not survive the victim’s death. We have characterized survivability as an issue of standing. See Matter of Wood, 643 F.2d 188, 190 (5th Cir. 1980) (stating that a trustee would have “standing” to press a decedent’s claim under the Truth in Lending Act’s .civil liability provisions only if the claim survived the plaintiffs death). Standing comes in many different forms. Cotton v. Certain Underwriters at Lloyd’s of London, 831 F.3d 592, 594-95 (5th Cir. 2016).

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840 F.3d 223, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 18952, 2016 WL 6127527, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/albert-malvino-v-paul-delluniversita-ca5-2016.