Davis-Lynch, Inc. v. Moreno

667 F.3d 539, 2012 WL 45415, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 549
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 10, 2012
DocketNo. 10-20859
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 667 F.3d 539 (Davis-Lynch, Inc. v. Moreno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis-Lynch, Inc. v. Moreno, 667 F.3d 539, 2012 WL 45415, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 549 (4th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-Appellee Davis-Lynch, Inc. (“Davis-Lynch” or the “Appellee”) filed a lawsuit against several defendants, including Defendant-Appellants Jose Alfredo Moreno (“Moreno”) and Ronald Wayne Pucek, III (“Pucek”) (collectively the “Appellants”),' seeking injunctive relief and damages pursuant to the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-1968 (“RICO”), and Texas law. Both of the Appellants initially asserted their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination in their answers to Davis-Lynch’s complaint. After Davis-Lynch moved for summary judgment against a number of defendants, including the Appellants, Moreno and Pucek each filed a response asserting that he had waived or was waiving his Fifth Amendment privilege, and each attached an affidavit denying Davis-Lynch’s accusations. The district court issued an order denying the Appellants’ respective withdrawals of their Fifth Amendment privilege and striking their respective affidavits. The district court then granted summary judgment for Davis-Lynch against all of the defendants, including Moreno and Pucek. The Appellants now appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment and order denying the Appellants’ withdrawal of their Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination and striking their affidavits. We affirm the district court’s denial of Pucek’s withdrawal of his Fifth Amendment privilege, but reverse the district court’s denial of Moreno’s withdrawal of his Fifth Amendment privilege. We also reverse and remand the court’s summary judgment with respect to both of the Appellants.

I. Facts & Proceedings

A. Facts

Davis-Lynch is a designer, manufacturer, and marketer of cementing and floating equipment for the oil field industry. Nancy Moreno (“Nancy”), an employee of Davis-Lynch, was in charge of accounts [544]*544payable and accounts receivable for the company. Moreno has been married to Nancy since August 16, 2008 and Pucek is married to Nancy’s daughter. Relatives of Nancy, including her daughter, worked under her supervision at Davis-Lynch.

After discovering that one of its copy machines was located at facilities owned or operated by Nancy’s son, Davis-Lynch undertook an investigation into the accounts payable that Nancy managed. According to its complaint, Davis-Lynch discovered through its investigation that Nancy and several others had embezzled millions of dollars from Davis-Lynch. Specifically, Davis-Lynch alleges that Nancy and other Davis-Lynch employees issued checks on Davis-Lynch’s accounts payable to various entities and individuals that were not entitled to any funds, including to Pucek and to Moreno and his company, Hanna-Skye, Inc. (“Hanna-Skye”).

B. Proceedings

Davis-Lynch filed a lawsuit against more than 20 defendants, including Moreno and Pucek, seeking injunctive relief and damages pursuant to RICO and Texas law.1 In their initial answers to the complaint, Moreno and Pucek each invoked his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination. Thereafter, during a contempt hearing held on September 13, 2010, Moreno waived his Fifth Amendment privilege in open court and answered questions from Davis-Lynch’s attorney. The transcript of the hearing reflects the following exchange:

Q [Attorney for Davis-Lynch]: Now, you previously pled the Fifth in this case. You’re aware of that?

A [Moreno]: Yes, sir.

Q: And you have withdrawn, I take it, your plea to the Fifth Amendment right?

A: Looks that way.

During this hearing, Davis-Lynch’s attorney asked Moreno substantive questions regarding his knowledge of the sources from which Nancy obtained her funds and whether he knew that funds provided to his company, Hanna-Skye, were embezzled.

A month later, on October 13, 2010, Davis-Lynch filed a motion for summary judgment against most of the defendants, including Moreno and Pucek. Specifically, Davis-Lynch requested that the district court hold that each of the defendants, including Moreno and Pucek, had committed both substantive RICO violations2 and had participated in a RICO conspiracy3, as well as several violations under Texas statutes and common law, including (1) statutory theft4, (2) common law fraud and misrepresentation, (3) common law civil conspiracy, (4) common law breach of fiduciary duty, and (5) common law conversion, misappropriation, and imposition of constructive trust.

[545]*545Davis-Lynch’s motion for summary judgment contained few specific references to both Moreno and Pucek. Instead of discussing specific defendants, Davis Lynch stated generally that all defendants were culpable under each claim. Davis-Lynch further noted that each of the defendants had asserted his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination, but did not expressly address Moreno’s withdrawal of his Fifth Amendment privilege during the contempt hearing.

In support of its motion for summary judgment, Davis-Lynch attached an expert report and affidavit of Charles C. Cummings, the examiner it had hired to investigate its account payables. In his affidavit, Cummings states that “it is my opinion that the defendants against whom summary judgment is sought were responsible for the loss of $15,000,000 by Davis-Lynch, Inc.” Although, as stated by Davis-Lynch, Cummings’ expert report (the “Cummings report”) is “the best summary of the evidence of appellants’ involvement ... ”, it also provides only broad generalizations and but a very few specific details regarding Moreno and Pucek.5

The only detailed and undisputed facts in the report with respect to Moreno are that Nancy created at least one false entry in Davis-Lynch’s records indicating that Hanna-Skye received a Davis-Lynch machine for which it did not pay. Specifically, the report states that, on one occasion, Nancy noted the sale of a machine from Davis-Lynch to Hanna-Skye in the amount of $8,000. In reviewing the entries and checks deposited, however, the report contends that the only consideration received by Davis-Lynch in payment for the machine were actually scrap and metal payments, not checks from Hanna-Skye in payment for the machine.6

With respect to Pucek, the report states that Davis-Lynch’s records reflect that it paid Pucek over $96,000.00 after 2006. The report further states that Nancy instructed. a Davis-Lynch employee to create some of the entries and quotes that employee as stating that she does not know if Pucek “actually did the work.” The report also quotes the “Plant Supervisor” at Davis-Lynch who states that Pucek’s last job was performed sometime in 2005 or 2006. The report contends that several of the Davis-Lynch checks are traceable to Pucek and his wife’s bank accounts, but notes that its analysis is not yet final.

Moreno and Pucek do not deny that they received illegally obtained funds or materials from Davis-Lynch. They simply deny that they knew that the funds were embezzled and claim that they understood the funds came from legitimate sources, i.e. Nancy’s life savings and inheritance or [546]*546settlement money that Nancy received after the death of her first husband.

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Bluebook (online)
667 F.3d 539, 2012 WL 45415, 2012 U.S. App. LEXIS 549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-lynch-inc-v-moreno-ca4-2012.