State v. Joseph Diorio (069597)

83 A.3d 831, 216 N.J. 598, 2014 WL 537643, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 12, 2014
DocketA-110-11
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 83 A.3d 831 (State v. Joseph Diorio (069597)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Joseph Diorio (069597), 83 A.3d 831, 216 N.J. 598, 2014 WL 537643, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 29 (N.J. 2014).

Opinion

Judge CUFF

(temporarily assigned) delivered the opinion of the Court.

In 1999, Joseph Diorio and two others conceived and executed a “bust-out” financial scheme by creating a business for the purpose of defrauding creditors. In a bust-out scheme, a company is formed and establishes a credit line presenting itself to the business community as a reputable company. Initially, it places small orders with suppliers. As it establishes a favorable payment history, the company’s credit limit is increased. Once the company’s suppliers are satisfied that the company has established a reputation for prompt payment, the volume of orders increases in size and cost. Once the goods are received, the company sells them but does not pay the supplier. The company stalls suppliers as long as possible before it declares bankruptcy or simply disappears, leaving suppliers unpaid.

Diorio and two others formed a corporation to distribute fresh produce. Defendant leased warehouse space with no refrigeration, obtained a license from the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), and submitted information to obtain a credit rating. Then the business placed its first orders. Consistent with the basic parameters of a bust-out scheme, small orders were placed for fresh produce, and payment was made promptly. Once the business established its reliability with suppliers, the size of the orders increased, and payments to suppliers slowed and then stopped altogether. Meanwhile, every shipment of produce immediately left the company’s warehouse and was transported to one of the warehouses operated by defendant and a co-defendant, who commingled the produce with their stock and sold it to their customers.

*602 The scheme organized and implemented by defendant placed its first order in late August 1999 and its last order in mid-January 2000. An indictment was returned on February 1, 2005. The statute of limitations for the charged offenses is five years.

This appeal concerns whether the State returned the indictment on the money laundering and theft by deception charges before expiration of the five-year statute of limitations. Central to this issue is whether these offenses are continuing offenses because the statute of limitations on such an offense does not begin to run until the prohibited conduct ceases. We must also determine whether the limitations period for the theft by deception charge runs from receipt and acceptance of the last shipment of goods or the date on which payment was due.

We hold that both offenses are continuing offenses. We also hold that when property has been obtained by a deceptive transaction that includes the extension of credit, the crime of theft by deception is not complete until payment has not been made in accordance with the agreement. Here, payment for the final shipment was not made in accordance with the purchase agreement, more than five years before return of the indictment, thus barring the indictment for theft by deception. We, therefore, affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the Appellate Division.

I.

Defendant Joseph Diorio owned several food industry companies in New Jersey, including Paterson Vending and Catering, Inc. and Victorian Coffee Systems. In March 1999, defendant approached a friend, David Menadier, and a business acquaintance, Michael Fava, about starting a wholesale produce company. Although Menadier had no prior experience in the produce industry, defendant proposed that Menadier be listed as the company’s president, director, and sole shareholder because defendant had previously sold a produce company and was bound by a non-compete provision. Defendant proposed that Fava would be a *603 silent partner responsible for brokerage of the produce because Fava had over thirty years of experience in the produce industry and owned two produce companies, Knowles Brokerage Inc. (KB I) and M. Fava, Inc. (M. Fava). Defendant informed Menadier and Fava that he would act as a “silent partner” and a “financial backer.” Menadier and Fava agreed to defendant’s business proposal and the three began to take steps to establish the produce business.

Using the proceeds from defendant’s other business bank accounts, defendant provided funds to Menadier to incorporate the produce company. In April 1999, defendant selected a non-refrigerated warehouse in Lodi to receive produce and instructed Menadier to sign a one-year lease. Defendant also advised and assisted Menadier in taking other steps to establish a wholesale produce business, such as forming a C-corporation with the State of New Jersey under the name All Statewide Produce, Inc., trading as Packed Fresh Produce, Inc. (PFP), obtaining a Perishable Agricultural Commodities Act (PACA) license, as required by 7 U.S.C.A. § 499c, from the USD A, and opening a mailbox account and a PFP business bank account. Menadier also changed the address on his driver’s license to match the mailbox address.

In June 1999, a person representing himself as Menadier contacted the Produce Reporting Company (PRC), which issues the Blue Book, a directory and reference guide on produce companies and their credit ratings. The Blue Book is a vital publication in the produce industry, so much so that it is referred to as “the Bible” by industry insiders. Either Fava or defendant, posing as Menadier, repeatedly provided PRC false information about PFP’s operations and finances, including that PFP operated a refrigerated warehouse, sold approximately 250 truckloads of produce per year to chain stores and to other wholesale markets, and possessed financial assets nearly $100,000 higher than its actual assets. Defendant also submitted fabricated financial statements to PRC, purportedly prepared by an accounting firm. Based upon *604 this false information, the October 1999 edition of the Blue Book listed PFP with a favorable credit rating.

Supported by a favorable Blue Book credit rating, PFP began to order small amounts of produce from various suppliers on credit, as is customary for wholesalers in the produce industry. From the inception of PFP, the corporation’s operations and finances were commingled with Fava’s and defendant’s separate businesses. Fava mixed PFP’s produce with produce from his family produce companies, sold the produce as a product of his family companies, and received checks payable to his family companies in payment for the commingled produce. Fava endorsed some of these checks to be made payable to defendant’s separate businesses. Defendant then deposited the cheeks into his separate company accounts and withdrew some of the cash to be deposited into PFP’s bank account.

Due to its initial prompt payments and willingness to pay more than the average price of produce, PFP quickly improved its credit rating and gained a favorable reputation in the produce industry. As companies increased their credit line with PFP, it dramatically increased the total cost and volume of its orders. Almost immediately after its credit line increased, PFP began to miss payments to its suppliers and wrote several cheeks that were returned for insufficient funds.

By January 2000, six suppliers were still shipping produce to PFP. Representatives of two of the suppliers, Tanimura & Antle, Inc. (Tanimura &

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Bluebook (online)
83 A.3d 831, 216 N.J. 598, 2014 WL 537643, 2014 N.J. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-joseph-diorio-069597-nj-2014.