International Floor Crafts v. Dziemit

CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 2011
Docket09-2349
StatusPublished

This text of International Floor Crafts v. Dziemit (International Floor Crafts v. Dziemit) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
International Floor Crafts v. Dziemit, (1st Cir. 2011).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit

Nos. 09-1555 09-1556 09-2349

INTERNATIONAL FLOOR CRAFTS, INC.,

Plaintiff, Appellee/Cross-Appellant,

v.

JANE DZIEMIT,

Defendant, Appellant/Cross-Appellee,

DAVID W. ADAMS; TYRONE WILLIAMS; KEVIN BRITTO; RONALD E. MITCHELL, Individually and d/b/a Mansfield Rug Company, a/k/a Mansfield Rug Department, a/k/a Remco; MICHAEL E. BROWN, Individually and d/b/a Dalton Padding, d/b/a Empire Weavers; AGATHA ESPOSITO; DONALD SHOOP; CHINESE CARPET CENTER, INC., d/b/a CCC International; JOHN D. SUN; DAVID D. SUN; PAUL SUN,

Defendants.

APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. Nathaniel M. Gorton, U.S. District Judge]

Before Torruella, Stahl and Howard, Circuit Judges.

Isaac H. Peres for appellant/cross-appellee Dziemit. Paul J. Klehm, with whom Benjamin L. Falkner and Krasnoo Klehm LLP were on brief, for appellee/cross-appellant International Floor Crafts, Inc.

April 21, 2011 STAHL, Circuit Judge. This trio of related appeals

arises from a 2005 civil action brought by International Floor

Crafts, Inc. ("IFC") for violations of the Racketeer Influenced and

Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., and

various Massachusetts state laws after IFC discovered a multi-

million dollar fraudulent scheme being perpetrated against it by

numerous individuals and entities. By mid-2008, only two

defendants remained in the suit — David Adams, a former employee of

IFC, and Jane Dziemit, an outside business woman. After a joint

five-day trial, the jury returned a verdict against both Adams and

Dziemit.

There are three appellate issues before the court, which

involve only Dziemit and IFC.1 Dziemit argues that the denial of

her motion for judgment as a matter of law was in error and that

the district court's jury instruction on common law fraud was

incorrect. IFC cross-appeals with respect to one state law claim

it brought under the Massachusetts Consumer Protection Act, Mass.

Gen. Laws ch. 93A ("Chapter 93A"), on which the district court

refused to enter judgment. Lastly, Dziemit separately appeals the

district court's imposition of an appeal bond for $10,000. For the

following reasons, we affirm the district court's judgment against

Dziemit and its imposition of the bond, and, at IFC's request, we

decline to rule on the Chapter 93A claim.

1 Adams did not appeal the jury verdict.

-2- I. Background

We recite the facts in the light most favorable to the

jury verdict. Anaya-Burgos v. Lasalvia-Prisco, 607 F.3d 269, 270

n.1 (1st Cir. 2010). Building 19, Inc. ("Building 19") is a

company that operates fourteen retail discount stores throughout

the New England area selling a wide variety of consumer products.

IFC manages the rug department of Building 19, and it is

responsible for supplying Building 19's flooring inventory, which

consists mostly of surplus and salvage oriental rugs, indoor and

outdoor rugs, remnants, padding, and wood flooring.

Because the scheme at issue involved the exploitation of

IFC's business practices, we summarize briefly IFC's procedures for

buying and selling rugs. Typically, IFC buyers negotiate with

outside vendors to purchase merchandise for retail sale. Upon

placing an order with a vendor, the IFC buyer creates a purchase

order detailing the product bought, the price of the product, and

the outside vendor's information. The buyer then provides copies

of this purchase order to the vendor, an IFC warehouse, and IFC's

accounts payable department.

After receiving a copy of the purchase order, the vendor

sends IFC an invoice and delivers the goods to the IFC warehouse.

An IFC receiver accepts the product, and a supervisor at the

warehouse completes a receiving document termed a "key-rec." The

key-rec details the merchandise received, and the supervisor is

-3- required to initial the document after having verified the contents

of the delivery. Once the key-rec is complete, it is sent to IFC's

accounts payable department. The accounts payable department

cross-checks the corresponding purchase order, invoice, and key-

rec. If personnel see no discrepancies in the paperwork, an

accounts payable manager issues payment to the vendor.

A. The Scheme

Starting sometime in the mid-1990s and lasting until

April 2005, Adams and co-conspirator Kevin Britto devised and

managed a fraudulent scheme that duped IFC into paying out millions

of dollars to various vendors based on fabricated invoices. As IFC

buyers,2 Adams and Britto prepared purchase orders for partially or

completely fake merchandise shipments, recording on the orders an

exaggerated amount of items purchased. Britto communicated these

fake purchases to Tyrone Williams, another IFC employee and the

supervisor of IFC's largest warehouse. Williams, in turn,

completed fraudulent key-recs to match the fraudulent purchase

orders.

Various outside vendors were brought into the scheme, and

some of these vendors were sham operations. These outside vendors

2 Britto worked for IFC from July 1988 to November 1997, and again from September 1998 to September 2001. He continued to receive money from the scheme even after he left IFC. Adams was initially an outside vendor who did business with IFC, but IFC later hired him as a buyer. Adams was terminated from IFC sometime in 2005, which precipitated the discovery of the fraud.

-4- would send invoices to IFC that matched the phony purchase orders

and key-recs, allowing the scheme to continue undetected by the

accounts payable department. Adams directed the vendors to charge

a specific amount on its invoices, and when IFC's accounts payable

department issued a check based on that amount, the vendors would

distribute approximately seventy-five percent of the ill-gotten

gains to Adams, keeping the remainder for themselves.

Chinese Carpet Center, Inc. ("CCC") was the primary

vendor that colluded with Adams and Britto. David Sun, CCC's

former treasurer, testified at trial about the company's knowing

participation, and he detailed the scheme's inner-workings. He

explained that CCC was consistently required to advance to Adams

large sums of money via cash, check, and wire transfers. In turn,

CCC would bill IFC for short or nonexistent shipments. When CCC

received payment from IFC, it was paid back the initially loaned

amount along with a profit, which was shared between CCC and Adams.

Sun explained that this loan system kept CCC in the scheme and made

it difficult to disengage, lest CCC not recoup the money it had

advanced.

B. Dziemit's Role and the Evidence Against Her

Prior to her involvement in the scheme, Dziemit worked as

a mortgage lender associated with various companies, many of which

were owned and operated by her boyfriend, Tony Maresca. Dziemit's

primary activity was the completion of loan paperwork for the

-5- companies, and she worked out of her home in Connecticut. At

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