MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
This 18 U.S.C. § 981 civil forfeiture action presents two questions concerning who qualifies as an “owner” so as to have standing to invoke the innocent-owner provision of § 981(a)(2). The first is whether one who is at once a victim and a participant in a fraud is barred by the doctrine of unclean hands from asserting an equitable interest in the money he paid in connection with the fraud. The second question is whether one who gives an associate money in connection with a planned commercial real estate venture, knowing that the money will be commingled with the associate’s other funds in bank accounts, is a bailor with standing to challenge the forfeiture of the associate’s accounts, or merely a general creditor without such standing.
The matter is now before the Court on plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and claimants’ various cross-motions for summary judgment.
For the reasons that follow, plaintiffs motion is granted and claimants’ motions are denied.
I
This is a tale of audacious international fraud. It serves as a striking reminder that avarice fueled by the lure of easy money can overwhelm good judgment, with costly consequences.
In April 1994, Kurt Moylan, a Guam businessman and former Lieutenant Governor of Guam, was contacted by a person identifying himself as Dr. Benjamin Okafor from Nigeria. Okafor represented himself to be a member of the Nigerian royal family and the second-in-command of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (“NNPC”), a state-owned enterprise. Okafor told Moylan that the predecessor government of Nigeria had “over-invoiced” a construction project by $20 million. Specifically, he explained that a foreign contractor had performed certain construction work for NNPC, and although the firm had billed and been fully paid $30 million, the Nigerian government had already earmarked or released a total of $50 million for the project. According to Okafor, the excess $20 million was being held in an account at the Central Bank of Nigeria (“CBN”) and because the money had been designated for payment of a foreign firm, the current Nigerian government could not di
rectly access the funds. For this reason, Okafor explained to Moylan, the current Nigerian government needed the assistance of a foreign firm to retrieve the funds. And this is where Moylan, as the operator of a foreign firm, could help the Nigerian government and, not incidentally, himself. The specifics of the deal, Okafor told Moylan, were that the Nigerian government was willing to pay 40% of the $20 million to Moylan if Moylan would provide an invoice for work done to NNPC in the amount of $20 million and a bank account outside of Nigeria into which the funds could be transferred.
Moylan agreed to the proposal and submitted the requested false invoice on April 20, 1994. This invoice for $20 million stated that his company, Home Financial Corp., had erected “super propylene for Monax axial flow turbine pipes” at a Nigerian refinery, even though, as Moylan admitted in his deposition, none of his companies had ever performed such work. After submission of the false invoice, all that remained, it seemed, was for Moylan to complete the “formal application” for the funds. To this end, Moylan agreed to meet Okafor in Hong Kong in late May 1994 so that Okafor could guide him through the technicalities of the Nigerian formal application documents. In Hong Kong, for the first time, Okafor told Moylan that he would have to pay administrative fees and taxes totaling $1,350,000 before CBN would release the money. Moylan, although initially reluctant, ultimately agreed to pay the requested amount. Okafor said the payments would have to be made to an official Nigerian “money exchanger” and identified Ihedi Uzodinma in Woodbridge, Virginia as such an official. Thereafter, Moylan wired $500,000 from Guam to Uzodinma’s account at NationsBank in Virginia in two installments. At Okafor’s direction, Moylan wired the remaining $850,000 to an account in England in the name of another money exchanger, George Oxford. On learning the account in England was closed, Moylan wired the $850,000 to Uzodinma in Virginia.
As a result of the large transfers to Uzo-dinma, an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) contacted Moylan on June 20 and inquired about the transfers. In a ten minute conversation with the agent, Moylan outlined the transaction and expressed no concern regarding its legitimacy. At the time, Moylan still believed he would receive the $8 million on June 21. On the morning of June 21, Moylan received a call from Okafor who asked whether he had been contacted about the deal. Because this call followed closely on the heels of the FBI visit, Moylan began to suspect that something was amiss. That afternoon, at 3:45 p.m. in Guam, Moylan received a call from a purported employee of the National Reserve Bank in New York telling him that his money was coming. Rather than soothing Moylan’s anxieties, the call further aroused his suspicions because he recognized that the call had to have been made at 1:45 a.m. New York time, a time when Federal Reserve Bank employees were unlikely to be at work. By this time, Moylan had begun to believe he had fallen victim to a fraud. He attempted to recover the money through his local banks and when those efforts failed, he contacted the FBI.
The FBI, as a result of its investigation, arrested Uzodinma in Virginia, and in June 1994 seized $1,291,128.89 in cash and bank accounts related to the fraud. The government has alleged two bases for the forfeiture of this cash. Count I alleges that Okafor used wire communications in a scheme to defraud Moylan, and that after Uzodinma received these proceeds of wire fraud, he engaged' in unlawful financial transactions with them in amounts greater than $10,000, thereby rendering the money forfeitable for violations of 18 U.S.C. § 1957. Count II alleges that by wiring the $1,350,000 to Uzo-dinma to promote a wire fraud against NNPC, Moylan transferred or attempted to transfer the money internationally, thereby rendering it forfeitable for a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2).
There are three claimants to the funds: Uzodinma, Moylan, and Victor Mbakpuo. Mbakpuo, who for purposes of these motions was wholly unaware of the fraud on Moylan, had given Uzodinma $55,000 in anticipation of joining with him in a commercial real estate joint venture. Uzodinma deposited this sum in various accounts: $30,000 in an
account with First Virginia Bank, Fairfax, Virginia and $20,000 in a Third Federal Savings and Loan account in Cleveland, Ohio, both of which accounts were seized by the government, and the remaining $5,000 in-an account with Ameribane, Annandale, Virginia, which account was not seized.
II
The funds in this case were seized pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 981.
Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI
MEMORANDUM OPINION
ELLIS, District Judge.
This 18 U.S.C. § 981 civil forfeiture action presents two questions concerning who qualifies as an “owner” so as to have standing to invoke the innocent-owner provision of § 981(a)(2). The first is whether one who is at once a victim and a participant in a fraud is barred by the doctrine of unclean hands from asserting an equitable interest in the money he paid in connection with the fraud. The second question is whether one who gives an associate money in connection with a planned commercial real estate venture, knowing that the money will be commingled with the associate’s other funds in bank accounts, is a bailor with standing to challenge the forfeiture of the associate’s accounts, or merely a general creditor without such standing.
The matter is now before the Court on plaintiffs motion for summary judgment and claimants’ various cross-motions for summary judgment.
For the reasons that follow, plaintiffs motion is granted and claimants’ motions are denied.
I
This is a tale of audacious international fraud. It serves as a striking reminder that avarice fueled by the lure of easy money can overwhelm good judgment, with costly consequences.
In April 1994, Kurt Moylan, a Guam businessman and former Lieutenant Governor of Guam, was contacted by a person identifying himself as Dr. Benjamin Okafor from Nigeria. Okafor represented himself to be a member of the Nigerian royal family and the second-in-command of the Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation (“NNPC”), a state-owned enterprise. Okafor told Moylan that the predecessor government of Nigeria had “over-invoiced” a construction project by $20 million. Specifically, he explained that a foreign contractor had performed certain construction work for NNPC, and although the firm had billed and been fully paid $30 million, the Nigerian government had already earmarked or released a total of $50 million for the project. According to Okafor, the excess $20 million was being held in an account at the Central Bank of Nigeria (“CBN”) and because the money had been designated for payment of a foreign firm, the current Nigerian government could not di
rectly access the funds. For this reason, Okafor explained to Moylan, the current Nigerian government needed the assistance of a foreign firm to retrieve the funds. And this is where Moylan, as the operator of a foreign firm, could help the Nigerian government and, not incidentally, himself. The specifics of the deal, Okafor told Moylan, were that the Nigerian government was willing to pay 40% of the $20 million to Moylan if Moylan would provide an invoice for work done to NNPC in the amount of $20 million and a bank account outside of Nigeria into which the funds could be transferred.
Moylan agreed to the proposal and submitted the requested false invoice on April 20, 1994. This invoice for $20 million stated that his company, Home Financial Corp., had erected “super propylene for Monax axial flow turbine pipes” at a Nigerian refinery, even though, as Moylan admitted in his deposition, none of his companies had ever performed such work. After submission of the false invoice, all that remained, it seemed, was for Moylan to complete the “formal application” for the funds. To this end, Moylan agreed to meet Okafor in Hong Kong in late May 1994 so that Okafor could guide him through the technicalities of the Nigerian formal application documents. In Hong Kong, for the first time, Okafor told Moylan that he would have to pay administrative fees and taxes totaling $1,350,000 before CBN would release the money. Moylan, although initially reluctant, ultimately agreed to pay the requested amount. Okafor said the payments would have to be made to an official Nigerian “money exchanger” and identified Ihedi Uzodinma in Woodbridge, Virginia as such an official. Thereafter, Moylan wired $500,000 from Guam to Uzodinma’s account at NationsBank in Virginia in two installments. At Okafor’s direction, Moylan wired the remaining $850,000 to an account in England in the name of another money exchanger, George Oxford. On learning the account in England was closed, Moylan wired the $850,000 to Uzodinma in Virginia.
As a result of the large transfers to Uzo-dinma, an agent of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) contacted Moylan on June 20 and inquired about the transfers. In a ten minute conversation with the agent, Moylan outlined the transaction and expressed no concern regarding its legitimacy. At the time, Moylan still believed he would receive the $8 million on June 21. On the morning of June 21, Moylan received a call from Okafor who asked whether he had been contacted about the deal. Because this call followed closely on the heels of the FBI visit, Moylan began to suspect that something was amiss. That afternoon, at 3:45 p.m. in Guam, Moylan received a call from a purported employee of the National Reserve Bank in New York telling him that his money was coming. Rather than soothing Moylan’s anxieties, the call further aroused his suspicions because he recognized that the call had to have been made at 1:45 a.m. New York time, a time when Federal Reserve Bank employees were unlikely to be at work. By this time, Moylan had begun to believe he had fallen victim to a fraud. He attempted to recover the money through his local banks and when those efforts failed, he contacted the FBI.
The FBI, as a result of its investigation, arrested Uzodinma in Virginia, and in June 1994 seized $1,291,128.89 in cash and bank accounts related to the fraud. The government has alleged two bases for the forfeiture of this cash. Count I alleges that Okafor used wire communications in a scheme to defraud Moylan, and that after Uzodinma received these proceeds of wire fraud, he engaged' in unlawful financial transactions with them in amounts greater than $10,000, thereby rendering the money forfeitable for violations of 18 U.S.C. § 1957. Count II alleges that by wiring the $1,350,000 to Uzo-dinma to promote a wire fraud against NNPC, Moylan transferred or attempted to transfer the money internationally, thereby rendering it forfeitable for a violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1956(a)(2).
There are three claimants to the funds: Uzodinma, Moylan, and Victor Mbakpuo. Mbakpuo, who for purposes of these motions was wholly unaware of the fraud on Moylan, had given Uzodinma $55,000 in anticipation of joining with him in a commercial real estate joint venture. Uzodinma deposited this sum in various accounts: $30,000 in an
account with First Virginia Bank, Fairfax, Virginia and $20,000 in a Third Federal Savings and Loan account in Cleveland, Ohio, both of which accounts were seized by the government, and the remaining $5,000 in-an account with Ameribane, Annandale, Virginia, which account was not seized.
II
The funds in this case were seized pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 981. Under § 981, the government bears the burden of demonstrating probable cause that a substantial connection exists between the property seized and the underlying criminal activity.
See Boas v. Smith,
786 F.2d 605, 609 (4th Cir.1986). This showing can be made on the basis of otherwise inadmissible hearsay.
United States v. 7715 Betsy Bruce Lane,
906 F.2d 110 (4th Cir.1990). The burden then shifts to the claimant to establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, either that the property was not involved in illegal activity, thereby rebutting the government’s showing of probable cause, or that claimant did not know about or consent to the illegal activity, pursuant to the so-called “innocent-owner defense” of 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(2).
United States v. Thomas,
913 F.2d 1111, 1114 (4th Cir.1990).
But before the innocent-owner defense can be asserted, the claimant “first must demonstrate a sufficient interest in the property to give him Article III standing; otherwise there is no ‘ease or controversy’ in the constitutional sense, capable of adjudication in the federal courts.”
United States v. $38,000 in United States Currency,
816 F.2d 1538, 1543 (11th Cir.1987).
To establish the requisite standing, the claimant must offer some evidence that he is an owner of the seized property.
United States v. $38,570 United States Currency,
950 F.2d 1108, 1112 (5th Cir.1992).
Congress has indicated that the “term ‘owner’ should be broadly interpreted to include any person with a recognizable legal or equitable interest in the property seized.”
Even one who merely possessed the seized property might qualify as an “owner.”
See, e.g., United States v. $122,043. in United States Currency,
792 F.2d 1470 (9th Cir. 1986). But despite its liberal interpretation, “owner” does not encompass those with an undefined interest in the seized property. Specifically, an unsecured creditor generally lacks standing to challenge a forfeiture because, while that person may have an interest in the property of the debtor from whom assets were seized, she cannot show that she held an interest in the
specific
property forfeited.
See, e.g., United States v. $20,193.39 United States Currency,
16 F.3d 344 (9th Cir.1994);
United States v. $47,875. in United States Currency,
746 F.2d 291 (5th Cir. 1984);
United States v. $500,000,
730 F.2d 1437 (11th Cir.1984). Finally, it is important to note that because the forfeiture statute “contains no rule for determining the scope of property rights, ‘it is appropriate to refer to state law in determining the nature of the property interest’ involved in a forfeiture proceeding.”
United States v. Smith,
966 F.2d 1045, 1054 n. 10 (6th Cir.1992) (quoting
United States v. Certain Real Property Located at 2525 Leroy Lane,
910 F.2d 343, 349 (6th Cir.1990),
cert. denied,
499 U.S. 947, 111 S.Ct. 1414, 113 L.Ed.2d 467 (1991));
see also United States v. 1977 Porsche Carrera 911 VIN 9117201924 License No. 459 DWR,
946 F.2d 30, 34 (5th Cir.1991).
It now remains to apply these principles to the facts of the case at bar.
III
The government contends Moylan has no standing to invoke the innocent-owner provision of 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(2) because he is merely a general, unsecured creditor and is therefore not an “owner or lienholder” as required by the statute.
See, e.g., United States v. $20,193.39,
16 F.3d 344 (9th Cir. 1994) (holding that unsecured creditor of business lacked standing to challenge civil forfeiture of property that government seized from business). For his part, Moylan argues, first, that he holds both legal and equitable title to the money and thus is more than a general creditor, and second, that even if he is only a general creditor, he is still an owner for purposes of the statute.
Moylan did not retain legal title to the money he transferred to Uzodinma’s accounts. It is well-settled that legal title to money passes with delivery to a person who acquires it in good faith and for valuable consideration.
Here, the $1,350,000 was transferred to Uzodinma’s NationsBank account. NationsBank accepted the transfers without knowledge of the international fraud and gave valuable consideration for the money in that it became indebted to Uzodinma for the deposited amounts.
See Alexander & Jones v. Sovran Bank (In re Nat Warren Contracting Co.),
905 F.2d 716 (4th Cir.1990). NationsBank, and not Moylan, therefore held legal title to the seized funds.
Moylan next argues that he holds equitable title to the funds he gave to Uzodinma because he is the beneficiary of a constructive trust. Although not yet decided in this circuit, other circuits have held that claimants have standing to challenge a forfeiture on the theory that they hold equitable title to the property as a result of a constructive trust.
Moylan contends that because he was the victim of a fraud, he should be deemed to be the beneficiary of a constructive trust consisting of the money he gave to Uzodinma.
This argument fails, for the equitable remedy of a constructive trust is unavailable to Moy-lan because he has unclean hands.
A constructive trust arises “by construction of law, being fastened upon the conscience of him who has the legal estate, in order to prevent what would otherwise be a fraud.”
In re Prime Construction Corp.,
156 B.R. 176, 179 (Bankr.E.D.Va.1993). As an equitable doctrine, it is subject to the requirement that “[h]e who comes into equity for relief must come with clean hands.”
Everett v. Bodwell,
185 Va. 405, 38 S.E.2d 319, 320 (1946). It is well settled that courts “will not permit anyone to reap the benefits of a
contract or an agreement, the carrying out of which involves his complicity in any fraudulent act, or any conduct inhibited by sound public policy.”
Dye v. Dye,
128 W.Va. 754, 39 S.E.2d 98, 107 (1946). Courts will not enforce a constructive trust in order to enable a person “to enforce a right which had grown out of a fraudulent transaction.”
Ford v. Buffalo Eagle Colliery Co.,
122 F.2d 555, 563 (4th Cir.1941).
Here, the undisputed facts in the record reflect that Moylan’s hands were far from clean in this transaction.
It is undisputed that Moylan provided Okafor with a $20 million invoice for work that Moylan and his firm did not do in order to cause the $20 million to be released. The invoice purported to be from Home Financial Corp., one of Moylan’s companies, and sought payment for the construction of super propylene for axial flow turbines for the NNPC. None of Moy-lan’s companies had in fact done any such work, nor had they done any business at all in Nigeria. Even if Moylan believed that Okafor represented the Nigerian government, the false document was clearly intended to deceive someone. Indeed, at the hearing on this matter, counsel for Moylan conceded that the document was meant to deceive certain members of the former Nigerian regime who were still employed by the new government. Regardless of how Moylan might characterize or attempt to justify his decision, the undisputed fact remains that he submitted a false invoice in order to receive $8 million. Submitting that false invoice was no more honest than forging an $8 million check. By any measure, this constitutes unclean hands.
Nor is this the full extent of Moylan’s unclean hands. In addition to providing a fraudulent invoice, Moylan provided Okafor with his corporate seal for Okafor to use in “authenticating” a forged signature purporting to be Moylan’s. Moylan contends that he did not believe that his signature would be forged, but rather that CBN officials would decide whether the document was sufficient to consummate the transaction with the corporate seal alone. In his deposition, however, he testified to the contrary:
Moylan: [Okafor said] “I’ll take your corporate seal and once it’s attested ...”
Q: Once what’s attested?
Moylan: My signature. You sign it. There’s a space over here that requires my signature.
Q: Stop. Let me stop you a second. But you weren’t going to be there to sign it.
Moylan: Correct.
Q: So what was going to be attested?
Moylan: My signature. Whoever was going to sign it.
Moylan Dep. at 100. It seems clear that Moylan anticipated that his signature would be forged, and he provided Okafor with his seal so that the forgery could be “authenticated.” Participation in the forgery bars
Moylan from seeking equitable relief.
See, e.g., Sokol v. Moses,
545 So.2d 950 (Fla.Dist. Ct.App.1989) (unclean hands precluded decedent’s son from contesting will where son knowingly participated in presenting the forged will to the probate court).
These undisputed facts demonstrate that Moylan cannot seek equity for he has not “done equity.”
Accordingly, he cannot be deemed to have an equitable interest in the seized funds.
The remaining question with respect to Moylan is whether he has standing as a general creditor to challenge the forfeiture. In general, an unsecured creditor does not have standing to challenge a forfeiture by way of the innocent-owner provision.
See, e.g., United States v. $20,193.39,
16 F.3d 344 (9th Cir.1994);
United States v. $47,875 in United States Currency,
746 F.2d 291 (5th Cir.1984);
United States v. $500,000,
730 F.2d 1437 (11th Cir.1984). Yet, this circuit has indicated the existence of a narrow exception to this general proposition. In
United States v.
Reckmeyer; 836 F.2d 200, 205-06 (4th Cir.1987), the panel addressed whether a general unsecured creditor may qualify as a third-party claimant under the continuing criminal enterprise forfeiture provision of 21 U.S.C. § 853(n)(2). The panel noted that unsecured creditors hold a legal interest in the debtor’s property, but that they typically face a substantial hurdle in making the necessary showing that they possess an interest in the
specific
property forfeited. Nonetheless, the unanimous panel, speaking through Judge Phillips, held that the petitioner in that case had overcome the hurdle because it was undisputed that
all
of the debtor’s assets had been forfeited. Thus, because petitioner’s interest necessarily lay within the estate, petitioner had an interest in the forfeited property.
The government seeks to distinguish
Reck-meyer
on the ground that it involved an
in personam
criminal forfeiture whereas this is a civil
in rem
proceeding. The government makes much of this distinction, but, in this context, it is a distinction without a difference, as the panel itself apparently recognized in relying on civil forfeiture cases in support of its holding.
See id.
at 206 n. 3. The heart of
Reckmeyer
is that because the debtor’s entire estate was forfeited, it was certain that the general creditor’s interest was within the forfeited property. That principle would seem' to apply equally to both civil and criminal forfeitures, provided a debtor’s entire estate has been forfeited.
Moylan argues that
Reckmeyer
is not limited to situations where the debtor’s entire estate is forfeited. The point of
Reckmeyer,
Moylan contends, is that where it is possible to link the creditor’s interest to the seized
property, the creditor has standing to challenge the forfeiture. In
Reckmeyer,
that link was possible because the debtor’s entire estate was forfeited. Here, Moylan argues, he can link his claim to the seized assets either by tracing the money he gave Uzodinma into the various seized accounts, or by reasoning that, pursuant to Count I of the Complaint, the assets are subject to forfeiture because of the fraud on Moylan, so Moylan has an interest in all seized funds.
This expansive reading of
Reckmeyer
must be rejected. In no reported case has an unsecured creditor been allowed to challenge a forfeiture apart from showing a legal, equitable, or possessory interest in the seized property. Specifically, no unsecured creditor has been permitted to trace the loaned funds to a particular seized asset. In considering Moylan’s suggested expansive reading, it is also important to note that other circuits have rejected
Reckmeyer,
either more or less explicitly.
Given this criticism, and that
Reckmeyer
has not been explicitly reaffirmed in light of that criticism, it would seem prudent to limit Reckmeyer to its particular facts.
Thus, if Uzodinma were shown to have forfeited his entire estate,
Reckmeyer
might provide Moylan standing to challenge the forfeiture pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 981(a)(2). It is undisputed, however, that Uzodinma still retains numerous assets: bank accounts and property in Nigeria, a house in Cleveland, and a car, at least.
Reckmeyer,
then, does not save the day for Moylan, and as a general creditor, he is without standing to challenge the forfeiture of the seized assets. Moylan must pursue other means of recovering his money. He may, for example, have a cause of action in tort against Uzodinma. Also, if he believes that as a victim of the fraud he deserves the money seized from Uzodinma, he may file a petition for remission of forfeited property with the Attorney General.
See
28 C.F.R. §§ 8.10, 9.3 (1995).
IY
Also at issue is the standing of Mbakpuo. It is undisputed that Mbakpuo gave Uzodinma a total of $55,000 in anticipation of their joint commercial real estate venture. The government contends that the transfer is properly characterized as a loan and Mbakpuo is therefore nothing more than an unsecured creditor, without standing to claim the seized money. Mbakpuo argues that he is a bailor of the funds and that he therefore retained title to the money and should be allowed to trace his payments to the seized funds.
Whether Mbakpuo should be considered a bailor or a creditor turns on the intent of Mbakpuo and Uzodinma in entering into the transaction, as manifested by their conduct and statements and any other relevant evidence.
See Reherd’s Adm’r v. Clem,
86 Va. 374, 10 S.E. 504 (1889). This principle, coupled with a review of the record as a whole, points convincingly to the conclusion that Mbakpuo is a creditor, not a bailor.
First, deposition testimony of Mbakpuo and Uzodinma indicates that the two viewed' Mbakpuo as a creditor rather than a bailor. Thus, Mbakpuo stated that he did not know into which account or accounts Uzodinma would deposit the money, nor did it seem to matter to Mbakpuo. In other words, Mbak-puo expected that the money would be commingled with Uzodinma’s money, not segregated as in a bailment. In Mbakpuo’s own
words, “Money is money, you know, and he can deposit money from several sources into one account, you know.” Mbakpuo Dep. at 34. Moreover, Mbakpuo apparently viewed himself as a creditor of Uzodinma, with the latter being indebted to him in the amount of $55,000. When asked whether he placed any restrictions on Uzodinma regarding what he could do with the money, Mbakpuo replied, “No, I did not place any restrictions. As far as I know — well, let me answer the question that you did ask. I mentioned before, I knew that he had a home in Cleveland. All I have to do is drag his behind in Court and sell the realty off I knew that on demand I would get it ” Mbakpuo Dep. at 31-32. Uzodinma’s deposition testimony similarly reflects that he saw himself as indebted to Mbakpuo for $55,000 and that he did not identify any particular monies as belonging to Mbakpuo. Rather, when Mbak-puo demanded the money, he intended simply to repay Mbakpuo from whatever account or accounts he deemed convenient.
Second, the conclusion that Mbakpuo is a creditor rather than a bailor comports with cases regarding the deposit of money in a bank. In those cases, the presumption is that “funds deposited in a general account immediately become the property of the bank and the bank becomes a debtor of the depositor.”
Alexander & Jones v. Sovran Bank (In re Nat Warren Contracting Co.),
905 F.2d 716 (4th Cir.1990). A depositor may be a bailor if the deposit is a “special” one, which requires that the money be kept in a separate account and not commingled with other funds.
See Bernardini v. Central Nat’l Bank of Richmond,
223 Va. 519, 290 S.E.2d 863 (1982) (holding that when special funds were commingled with other deposits the entire sum became the property of the bank). Here, Mbakpuo neither intended nor expected to have returned to him the very same money he transferred to Uzodinma. Indeed he could not have had this intention or expectation since he paid by check. Nor was the money kept in a special account. Rather, the money was deposited in various of Uzodinma’s personal accounts and was commingled with Uzodinma’s other money, including — unfortunately for Mbak-puo — money from Moylan. Giving Uzodinma money to hold was tantamount to depositing the funds in a bank, making Mbakpuo a creditor rather than a bailor.
Finally, Mbakpuo claims he gave the money to Uzodinma in anticipation of a joint commercial real estate venture. In so doing, he merely made a business investment, not a bailment. Unless that investment matured into some form of legal or equitable interest in some property, Mbakpuo cannot be an owner of any specific property.
Cf. United States v. $47,875,
746 F.2d 291 (5th Cir.1984) (finding that claimants who gave money to drug purchaser whose assets were forfeited for the purpose of financing a joint venture were not owners because the state-law requirements for the formation of a joint venture were not met.)
In sum, because Mbakpuo is a creditor rather than a bailor, he lacks standing to claim any portion of the seized assets and his claim must be dismissed. At oral argument, Mbakpuo recited an African saying that when two elephants fight, the grass suffers. Mbakpuo likened himself to the grass in this fight between the government and the fraud participants. Even though Mbakpuo is not entitled to assert the innocent-owner defense, the grass may yet survive the trampling it has suffered: Uzodinma appears to be indebted to Mbakpuo in the amount of $55,000, and Mbakpuo must seek repayment from Uzodinma directly.
An appropriate order will issue.