Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,549, 18 Ucc rep.serv.2d 588 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Kenneth J. Davis, Linda J. Davis, Leroy H. Moeller, as Personal Representative of the Estates of Adolph Hagstrom, Squire J. Kingston, Elizabeth Woods, Caroline Estelle, Lynnis H. McClain Ted Masco, Anita K. Hailey, Earl Setterblade, Francis Setterblade, Lloyd Schutzman, Shirley Schutzman, Albert C. Heil, Melvin Burkhardt, Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Howard Dore, Ruth Dore, Gerald J. Braun, Christie Braun, Monica Brooke Braun, C. Albert Ducharme Trust and Catherine F. Ducharme Trust, Seaton F. McDaniel Josephine McDaniel Trudy and Sidney Kleiner, Claimants-Appellants. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Melvin Burkhardt and Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Movants-Appellants

953 F.2d 1560
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 1992
Docket89-5457
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 953 F.2d 1560 (Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,549, 18 Ucc rep.serv.2d 588 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Kenneth J. Davis, Linda J. Davis, Leroy H. Moeller, as Personal Representative of the Estates of Adolph Hagstrom, Squire J. Kingston, Elizabeth Woods, Caroline Estelle, Lynnis H. McClain Ted Masco, Anita K. Hailey, Earl Setterblade, Francis Setterblade, Lloyd Schutzman, Shirley Schutzman, Albert C. Heil, Melvin Burkhardt, Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Howard Dore, Ruth Dore, Gerald J. Braun, Christie Braun, Monica Brooke Braun, C. Albert Ducharme Trust and Catherine F. Ducharme Trust, Seaton F. McDaniel Josephine McDaniel Trudy and Sidney Kleiner, Claimants-Appellants. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Melvin Burkhardt and Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Movants-Appellants) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,549, 18 Ucc rep.serv.2d 588 Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Kenneth J. Davis, Linda J. Davis, Leroy H. Moeller, as Personal Representative of the Estates of Adolph Hagstrom, Squire J. Kingston, Elizabeth Woods, Caroline Estelle, Lynnis H. McClain Ted Masco, Anita K. Hailey, Earl Setterblade, Francis Setterblade, Lloyd Schutzman, Shirley Schutzman, Albert C. Heil, Melvin Burkhardt, Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Howard Dore, Ruth Dore, Gerald J. Braun, Christie Braun, Monica Brooke Braun, C. Albert Ducharme Trust and Catherine F. Ducharme Trust, Seaton F. McDaniel Josephine McDaniel Trudy and Sidney Kleiner, Claimants-Appellants. Securities and Exchange Commission v. Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee, Melvin Burkhardt and Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Movants-Appellants, 953 F.2d 1560 (11th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

953 F.2d 1560

Fed. Sec. L. Rep. P 96,549, 18 UCC Rep.Serv.2d 588
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Charles Phillip ELLIOTT, et al., Defendants,
Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee,
Kenneth J. Davis, Linda J. Davis, Leroy H. Moeller, As
Personal Representative of the Estates of Adolph Hagstrom,
Squire J. Kingston, Elizabeth Woods, Caroline Estelle,
Lynnis H. McClain, Ted Masco, Anita K. Hailey, Earl
Setterblade, Francis Setterblade, Lloyd Schutzman, Shirley
Schutzman, Albert C. Heil, Melvin Burkhardt, Rosa Ella
Burkhardt, Howard Dore, Ruth Dore, Gerald J. Braun, Christie
Braun, Monica Brooke Braun, C. Albert Ducharme Trust and
Catherine F. Ducharme Trust, Seaton F. McDaniel, Josephine
McDaniel, Trudy and Sidney Kleiner, Claimants-Appellants.
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Charles Phillip ELLIOTT, et al., Defendants,
Charles O. Farrar, Receiver-Appellee,
Melvin Burkhardt and Rosa Ella Burkhardt, Movants-Appellants.

Nos. 89-5457, 89-5528.

United States Court of Appeals,
Eleventh Circuit.

Feb. 27, 1992.

Merrill N. Johnson, Naples, Fla., for K. Davis.

Kathleen Monahan, Miami, Fla., for L. Moeller.

Mark A. Ebelini, Ft. Myers, Fla., for H. Dore.

Ronald L. Stetler, Naples, Fla., for Virginia Moore.

John Charles Coleman, Robert J. Coleman, Seaton F. and Josephine A. McDaniel, Ft. Myers, Fla., Gertrude and Sid Kleiner, Naples, Fla., Kathleen A. Monahan, Joaquin Mendez, Miami, Fla., for C. Albert Ducharme Trust.

Lyons and Farrar, Miami, Fla., for Farrar.

Frank P. Murphy, Naples, Fla., for S.J. Kingston and Melvin and Rose Ella Burkhardt.

Marsha Lyons, Lyons & Farrar, William Sadowski, Miami, Fla., for Securities and Exchange Com'n.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.

Before FAY and HATCHETT, Circuit Judges, and HILL, Senior Circuit Judge.

HILL, Senior Circuit Judge:

I. THE RECEIVERSHIP

The Securities and Exchange Commission brought a complaint against Charles Phillip Elliott, Charles Phillip Elliott d/b/a Elliott Enterprises, Elliott Securities, Inc., and Elliott Mortgage Co., Inc., for various violations of the Securities and Exchange Act. The district court granted a permanent injunction enjoining further securities violations and appointed Charles O. Farrar as Equity Receiver for Elliott.1 The Receiver was ordered to take possession of the companies' assets, to file an initial report of the state of these assets, and to propose a plan of distribution of assets to victims of Elliott.

There were nearly two-thousand claims filed, each of which had to be dealt with by the Receiver and, ultimately, by the district judge. Finally, the district court entered an Order Establishing Final Plan for Distribution of Assets, from which twenty-seven claimants appeal, raising numerous objections to the Final Plan.

Elliott was engaged in a massive Ponzi-type scheme. He devised several programs as vehicles for the victims to "invest" in his companies. He offered conditional sales agreements and beneficial interest agreements (treasury bond agreements), where for his or her investment, the investor would receive periodic tax-free interest payments up to an annual rate of 15%. These investments were supposed to be secured by municipal and treasury bonds placed in the custody of third parties. There were some shortcomings in Elliott's programs: the interest was not tax-free, and Elliott did not purchase any bonds as collateral.

Elliott also offered a special Stock or Bond Income Program Agreement. If an investor's stock was not paying him large enough dividends, he could deposit his stock certificates with Elliott, giving him the right to purchase the stock at fair market value. In return, Elliott agreed to make monthly interest payments that would exceed what the investor was currently earning on his stocks and bonds. Unfortunately, the investor unwittingly transferred legal title to the stocks and bonds to Elliott when he entered these agreements. Elliott acquired the funds to make the monthly payments to investors by selling their stock.

With Notes and Collateral Loan Agreements, Elliott promised investors that, in return for their investments, he would make monthly payments and secure their investments with stocks and bonds. In reality, these stocks and bonds did not exist, Elliott never deposited them with a third party custodian, or the stocks and bonds were already hypothecated. In return for some of the investments, Elliott gave investors promissory notes "secured by the full faith and credit of Elliott Mortgage."

Elliott made many other false representations, including that his company was a registered investment advisor, that Elliott Enterprises was an underwriter for municipal bonds, that the investments were tax-free, and that his companies had received a "clean bill of health" from periodic audits by the Florida Department of Professional Regulation. As a result of these misrepresentations, Elliott managed to convince people who were anxious to believe that they could earn high returns that their investments were secured when they were not. Part of Elliott's con was creating documents that made investors believe they were secured.

It is this web of false representations that the Receiver and district court were called upon to disentangle for the benefit of defrauded claimants. Elliott had sold many of the securities and depleted the money invested so that practically none of the claimants would recover more than a small fraction of their investments. The district court ordered the liquidation of Elliott's estate and established a claims procedure by which claimants would file their proofs of claim. One thousand eight hundred and ninety (1,890) claims were filed. One year later, the Receiver requested permission to notify the claimants of his Proposed Plan for Distribution of Assets. In this plan, the Receiver delivered its factual findings and advised the district court of the legal status of each claim. The district court entered an Order authorizing the Receiver to notify claimants of the plan, to provide them instructions, and to create fill-in-the-blank pleading forms for filing objections within thirty days of the notice. After the objections were filed, the Receiver responded by briefing the district court on the factual and legal issues raised in the objections. In some cases, the claimants replied to the Receiver's response to their objections. Then, the district court entered its Order Establishing Final Plan for Distribution of Assets.

The district court and Receiver had a mammoth task before them, and they did a thorough job. However, because of the sheer size of the receivership estate and the huge number of claimants, it was inevitable that some of the claimants' objections would not be treated as completely as the objecting parties desired. Of the one thousand sixty-two (1,062) claimants, twenty-seven appeal. We will deal with each of their appeals in turn.

II. DUE PROCESS

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