United States v. $8,221,877.16 in United States Currency

330 F.3d 141, 2003 WL 21223874
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2003
Docket02-1264
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 330 F.3d 141 (United States v. $8,221,877.16 in United States Currency) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. $8,221,877.16 in United States Currency, 330 F.3d 141, 2003 WL 21223874 (3d Cir. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

RENDELL, Circuit Judge.

The controversy before us focuses on over eight million dollars in forfeited funds. Fighting over these funds are, on the one hand, the corporations that claim them, Kesten Development Corporation and its Brazilian parent company, Turist-Cambio Viagens e Turismo Ltda. (collectively, “Kesten”), and on the other, the United States government, to whom they have been forfeited. Somewhere in between lies Kesten’s bank, which, Kesten claims, improperly turned over the funds to the government. We address two issues: first, whether we should exercise our appellate jurisdiction when the appeal is from an order terminating one of two consolidated cases, and second, whether the District Court erred in refusing to entertain Kesten’s dismissal motion and granting judgment of forfeiture to the government early in the government-initiated proceedings. We conclude that we should exercise our jurisdiction and we will reverse the District Court’s award of judgment of forfeiture and remand for further proceedings.

*144 I. Background

Our story begins with the seizure of Kesten’s funds. In January 1999, the DEA obtained warrants to seize the contents of bank accounts Kesten maintained at MTB and European American Bank. The warrants directed the agents to seize the funds within ten days. Within that time frame, the DEA seized all the existing funds in both accounts, totaling approximately $7.3 million. 1 The DEA then orally directed MTB to send it any funds subsequently deposited or wired into the MTB account. From January through December 1999, MTB did so, forwarding to the DEA over $800,000 in additional funds (the “after-deposited funds”).

Kesten attacked the seizures on two fronts. First, Kesten brought a four-count suit against MTB in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York claiming that MTB had breached its contractual, statutory, and common law obligations by turning over the after-deposited funds without any legal process authorizing that action (the “MTB action”). Next, Kesten filed a motion under Federal Rule of Procedure 41(e) in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey seeking the return of all the funds seized by the DEA. In June 2000, after negotiations with Kesten broke down, the government instituted the forfeiture action by filing a civil complaint for forfeiture in the same court. 2

The forfeiture complaint alleged that the seized funds were involved in a drug money laundering conspiracy headed by a South American money exchanger, Markos Glikas. Glikas was arrested in April 1998 and convicted of conspiracy to commit money laundering in March 1999. As part of the conspiracy, Glikas allegedly delivered drug proceeds to Antonio Pires de Almeida (“Pires”), the former owner of Turist-Cambio, who would then launder the money through various intermediate accounts, ultimately depositing it in Kes-ten’s account at MTB (the “Venus” account). The government claimed that the seized funds were subject to forfeiture under 18 U.S.C. §§ 981 and 984 for involvement in transactions that violated the federal money laundering statutes. Along with the complaint, the government served nearly forty pages of detailed interrogatories on Turist-Cambio and Kesten, as authorized by the rules governing forfeiture proceedings.

In July 2000, pursuant to a stipulation extending the deadline for filing a claim, Kesten filed a verified claim to the funds, over Pires’s signature as its legal representative. Kesten was thus prosecuting a civil action in New York and defending a civil forfeiture action in New Jersey, both of which revolved around the funds seized from the Venus account.

After the government filed the forfeiture action, MTB filed a motion to have the MTB action stayed, to have the government joined as an indispensable party, or to have the action transferred to the District of New Jersey. Finding that the MTB action could have been brought in New Jersey and that transfer would serve the interests of justice because the two actions involved common questions about the propriety of the seizure, the New York District Court granted the motion for transfer. Kesten Dev. Corp. v. MTB Banking Corp., 00 Civ. 2730 (S.D.N.Y. filed Sept. 22, 2000).

*145 At a status conference after the transfer, the Magistrate Judge overseeing discovery in the forfeiture action entered an order sua sponte consolidating the forfeiture and MTB actions “for all purposes.” The Judge then ordered the MTB action “stayed for all purposes pending a decision on the motions” then before the Court in the forfeiture action.

The motions then before the Court in the forfeiture action arose out of Kesten’s motion to dismiss. The government had granted Kesten additional time to “answer or otherwise respond to” the forfeiture complaint. Within the stipulated time period, Kesten filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12, based on, inter alia, the government’s failure to file the complaint within the applicable statute of limitations. Rather than responding to Kesten’s motion, the government cross-moved for an order directing Kesten to answer the complaint and respond to the interrogatories, arguing that the Supplemental Rule governing forfeiture pleadings was inconsistent with the relevant Federal Rule of Civil Procedure and required Kesten to answer the interrogatories before filing any dispositive motions. The District Court agreed, holding that a forfeiture claimant may not file a motion to dismiss, or any other disposi-tive motion, in lieu of an answer. United States v. $8,221,877.16 in U.S. Currency, 148 F.Supp.2d 427, 434 (D.N.J.2001). The Court then dismissed Kesten’s motion to dismiss without prejudice and directed Kesten to serve its answer and respond to the interrogatories.

Faced with the prospect of responding to enormously detailed interrogatories, Kesten petitioned the Court for relief. After a hearing, the Magistrate Judge limited the scope of the interrogatories and ordered Pires to submit to a deposition in the United States. (Mag. Order of July 13, 2001) Unfortunately for Kesten, Pires declined to do so, as he was apparently in ill health and also feared that he would be arrested upon entry into the U.S. He did, however, indicate his willingness to be deposed in Brazil. Kesten responded to the remaining interrogatories but never produced Pires for the deposition.

The government then moved for discovery sanctions under Rule 37(b), asking the District Court to strike Kesten’s claim. The District Court granted the government’s motion, dismissed Kesten’s claim to the funds, and, twelve days later, entered a final judgment of forfeiture. Kesten thus lost the funds without ever having a chance to attack the complaint.

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330 F.3d 141, 2003 WL 21223874, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-822187716-in-united-states-currency-ca3-2003.