Daniel S. De La Garza v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedOctober 22, 1998
Docket03-96-00084-CR
StatusPublished

This text of Daniel S. De La Garza v. State (Daniel S. De La Garza v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Daniel S. De La Garza v. State, (Tex. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN



NO. 03-96-00084-CR
Daniel S. De La Garza, Appellant


v.



The State of Texas, Appellee



FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 167TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT

NO. 0953354, HONORABLE TOM BLACKWELL, JUDGE PRESIDING

A jury found appellant Daniel S. De La Garza guilty of engaging in organized criminal activity. See Tex. Penal Code Ann. § 71.02(a)(8) (West Supp. 1998). The district court assessed punishment at imprisonment for five years and a $10,000 fine.

Appellant brings forward seven points of error by which he challenges the legal and factual sufficiency of the evidence, complains of error in the court's charge to the jury, and urges a due process violation arising from the State's alleged failure to disclose favorable evidence. We will overrule these points and affirm the judgment of conviction.



BACKGROUND

The State called twenty-five witnesses over eight days of testimony and introduced scores of documents. We will attempt to summarize all of this complex evidence as clearly and briefly as possible. Throughout the opinion, dollar amounts will be stated in round terms.

Banker's Protective Life

At the center of the events giving rise to this prosecution was Banker's Protective Life Insurance Company (Banker's), a small life insurance company headquartered in Austin. In the summer of 1991, Banker's had recently emerged from supervision by the Texas Department of Insurance and was a shell corporation with a net worth of $100,000. Kevin Boyd was the president of Banker's and its principal shareholder.

Appellant was president of DLG Financial Corporation (DLG), an investment company with offices in The Woodlands. One of appellant's investment activities was buying and selling mortgage loan pools, the market for which was particularly heated in the early 1990's. (1) Beginning in late 1990, Boyd and appellant discussed the possibility of appellant acquiring or investing in Banker's, which in turn would purchase blocks of life insurance from other insurance companies and use the assets to invest in pools of mortgage loans.

The opportunity to carry out this strategy presented itself in the form of National Foundation Life Insurance Company (National), a financially troubled insurance company headquartered in Fort Worth. In June 1991, National agreed to sell 10,000 life insurance policies to Banker's for $3 million. After securing the necessary regulatory approvals, the Banker's-National transaction closed on August 27, 1991. Immediately thereafter, Banker's began buying and selling packages of mortgage loans at appellant's direction. The jury found that appellant, acting with the intent to establish, maintain, and participate in a combination and its profits, secured regulatory approval of the Banker's-National transaction by means of deception, and that he thereafter misapplied the assets of Banker's.



Banker's obtains regulatory approval

The Banker's-National transaction required the approval of insurance regulators in Texas and Delaware, the state in which National was chartered. Regulators from both states were concerned with Banker's financial condition. Under insurance accounting, an insurer's obligation to pay under a contract of life insurance is a liability for which the insurer must maintain an equivalent amount of cash and other assets as a reserve. When a block of insurance is sold by one insurance company to another (a process called reinsurance), the purchasing company (the reinsurer) acquires both the liabilities and the reserve assets. Customarily, the selling company receives its payment by retaining assets equal to the purchase price. In this case, the National life insurance contracts to be acquired by Banker's represented a $13 million liability. Under their agreement, National would deliver to Banker's cash and other assets valued at $10 million, keeping the remaining $3 million in reserve assets as its payment. Thus, to maintain the necessary balance between liabilities and assets, Banker's needed a capital infusion of at least $3 million.

The plan conceived by appellant and Boyd called for the necessary capital to come from DLG, which would invest $5 million in Banker's and receive in return a $5 million surplus debenture from the insurance company. (2) Initially, appellant proposed to make this investment in the form of a package of mortgage loans. When the Texas Department of Insurance objected to this arrangement, appellant agreed to make the investment in cash. On June 26, 1991, to satisfy regulators that the necessary $5 million was available, Boyd delivered to representatives of the Texas and Delaware insurance departments copies of an escrow agreement signed by Boyd on behalf of Banker's, appellant on behalf of DLG, and Park Jones, chairman and chief executive officer of Provident Bank in Dallas. The agreement, dated June 25, 1991, stated that DLG "has deposited" $5 million in an escrow account at Provident to be delivered to Banker's at the closing of the transaction between Banker's and National. This statement was false. Jones testified that no money had been deposited in Provident by DLG as of June 26.

On July 2, 1991, appellant wrote and deposited two checks, each for $5 million. One of these checks was drawn on DLG's Provident account and deposited in DLG's account at the National Bank of Conroe (Bank of Conroe). The second check was drawn on the Bank of Conroe account and deposited in the Provident account. On that date, and before the two deposits were made, DLG's Provident account had a balance of $195,000 and its Bank of Conroe account had a balance of $6400.

On July 8, Jones notified the Delaware insurance department in writing that DLG's Provident account had a balance of $5,195,000. Jones acknowledged at trial that this was a ledger balance only, since the $5 million check deposited by appellant on July 2 had not yet cleared, and testified that the bank would not have honored any check drawn on those funds. In fact, on July 9, Provident refused to pay appellant's July 2 check due to insufficient funds. Similarly, on July 11, Bank of Conroe refused to pay the check appellant drew on DLG's account in that bank, also for insufficient funds.

Meanwhile, Texas insurance regulators were concerned that appellant, by his $5 million investment in Banker's, was seeking to obtain control of the company without going through the statutorily required approval process. They were also concerned that appellant would use his control of Banker's to make imprudent investments. After extensive negotiations between Philip Barnes, the Texas Commissioner of Insurance, and attorneys for Banker's, a compromise agreement was reached. This agreement was memorialized in a letter to Barnes from Banker's attorney dated August 14, 1991. The letter stated that pursuant to the agreement, Barnes would "immediately enter an order approving the reinsurance transaction . . .

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Daniel S. De La Garza v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daniel-s-de-la-garza-v-state-texapp-1998.