United States v. Copus

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 1997
Docket95-6034
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Copus (United States v. Copus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Copus, (10th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

F I L E D United States Court of Appeals Tenth Circuit

APR 23 1997 PUBLISH PATRICK FISHER UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS Clerk TENTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

Plaintiff-Appellee,

v. No. 95-6034

VIRGIL ALLAN COPUS,

Defendant-Appellant,

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Oklahoma (D.C. No. CR-94-73-T)

Joseph W. Strealy, of Schnetzler/Strealy, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, for Defendant-Appellant.

Thomas M. Gannon, Attorney, Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. (Rozia McKinney-Foster, United States Attorney, and Jerome A. Holmes, Assistant United States Attorney, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, with him on the brief), for Plaintiff-Appellee.

Before SEYMOUR, Chief Judge, ANDERSON and KELLY, Circuit Judges.

SEYMOUR, Chief Judge. Virgil Allan Copus was convicted of making a false statement to a bank, in

violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1014. The district court sentenced him to a term of

twenty-four months imprisonment, followed by twenty-four months of supervised

release, and ordered him to pay restitution. He appeals his conviction and

sentence. We affirm the conviction, but we remand for resentencing.

I.

On April 8, 1987, Mr. Copus executed two notes to the Bank of Hydro

(Hydro); one line of credit for $250,000 and one installment note for $50,000.

Mr. Copus borrowed the money to finance his farming and ranching activities,

and although ostensibly only the smaller loan was to refinance existing debt, most

of these funds were immediately used to satisfy existing debt to Hydro and the

Bank of Canute. The notes were secured by Mr. Copus’ cattle, crops, farm,

equipment, and minerals, and ninety percent of their value was guaranteed by the

Federal Home Administration (FHA). The federal guarantee required that cattle

inspections be performed quarterly, although Hydro officials admitted they

performed these inspections only biannually. On several occasions, these

inspections were performed by Hydro’s vice-president in charge of its office in

Eakly, Oklahoma, Randy Hutcherson.

-2- On December 16, 1989, Dale Beerwinkle inspected Mr. Copus’ cattle on

behalf of Hydro, or at least he thought he did. All parties agree that Mr. Copus

guided Mr. Beerwinkle to a herd of roughly 464 head of cattle, valued at

$218,969, but the parties dispute how much of that herd belonged to Mr. Copus

and what representations Mr. Copus made to Mr. Beerwinkle as to his ownership

interest in this livestock. Nonetheless, the first-hand accounts of what transpired

at the December 16 cattle inspection are fundamentally consistent.

According to Mr. Beerwinkle, he met Mr. Copus at the latter’s house at

8:00 on that Saturday morning. The two drove to look at some exotic bulls, with

Mr. Beerwinkle driving his pickup at Mr. Copus’ direction. 1 Mr. Copus provided

a head count, which Mr. Beerwinkle roughly verified. Mr. Beerwinkle noticed an

unusual brand on the bulls’ left hip, and Mr. Copus explained that it has a holding

brand and that he had a partner who acquired these bulls in other parts of the

state. 2 He said they would ship the bulls in, fatten them up on wheat pasture, and

1 Mr. Beerwinkle testified:

Q. Did Mr. Copus tell where the cattle were and -- A. Yes. We rode together and he showed me.

Rec., vol. III, at 477.

On cross-examination, Mr. Beerwinkle attempted to explain how Mr. Copus 2

explained this:

Q. ...[D]id you say he had a -- you thought he had a partner on the bulls, or -- (continued...)

-3- ship them to sale “to make extra profit.” Rec., vol. III, at 457. Mr. Beerwinkle

recorded estimates of the bulls’ weights. Mr. Copus and Mr. Beerwinkle then

drove to several more locations. At each site where Mr. Copus was grazing stock,

he told Mr. Beerwinkle how many cattle were there, and Mr. Beerwinkle

attempted to confirm the number and estimate their weight. In one case, Mr.

Copus thought several head were missing, which Mr. Beerwinkle separately

noted. Finally, they returned to Mr. Copus’ house, where he had fifteen exotic

heifers which Mr. Beerwinkle noted. As they talked, Mr. Copus mentioned he

had cattle in another location “on the gain,” meaning he was grazing cattle

belonging to someone else who would pay him upon sale for any additional

weight gain.

Mr. Beerwinkle testified that this was the first and only time Hydro had not

given him any records prior to inspection describing the cattle he was to inspect,

and he suggested that not having the records may have affected the accuracy of

his count. See rec., vol. III, at 476-77. Mr. Beerwinkle testified that Mr. Copus

2 (...continued) A. He mentioned having a partner. Q. He mentioned having a partner? A. But he didn’t explain it exactly, and perhaps I was at fault for -- Q. No, we’re not finding any fault with you, sir. A. Okay.

Rec., vol. III, at 471.

-4- did not say or do anything to indicate he did not own the cattle. On the other

hand, Mr. Beerwinkle also testified that he did not believe Mr. Copus ever said he

was taking him to see the cattle in which Hydro had an interest. Rather, he said,

“That’s what I assumed he was showing me.” Rec., vol. III, at 472.

After leaving Mr. Copus’ house, Mr. Beerwinkle talked to Mr. Hutcherson

because he was concerned about assessing the value of the bulls with the holding

brands and the exotic breeds. Mr. Hutcherson told him to do the best he could.

Within the week, Mr. Beerwinkle prepared a written report for Hydro in which he

estimated the value of Mr. Copus’ cattle at $218,969, although he later testified

that he made errors in his calculations. Mr. Copus did not see the report at that

time, and was not apprised of its contents until much later.

Mr. Copus’ version of these events accords substantially with Mr.

Beerwinkle’s. He testified he showed Mr. Beerwinkle bulls that he “had a partner

on,” rec., vol. IV, at 619, and other cattle that he owned. 3 As he sold cattle

3 Mr. Copus and Steve Bonham evidently had an arrangement to split the profits on some bulls. While this may have given Mr. Copus a property interest in the bulls, he and Mr. Bonham did not have a partnership.

As to the cattle he said he owned, Mr. Copus testified:

Q. Tell us. Did you own -- or did you and the bank own them? A. Yes. Q. In other words, they were cattle that were there that you -- that were the bank’s cattle? A. Yes. (continued...)

-5- throughout the winter and the spring he deposited all proceeds with Hydro,

although he did not necessarily direct that these moneys be used to repay his

loans.

Before the line of credit loan matured in April 1990, Mr. Copus and Mr.

Hutcherson completed a short-term extension. Such extensions are common with

agricultural loans, due to uncertainties of weather, prices, and harvest times. In

this case Mr. Copus sought to fatten his cattle more before selling them. On April

8, Mr. Copus signed a financial statement prepared by Mr. Hutcherson which

stated that Mr. Copus had 500 cattle worth $270,000, although testimony from

Mr. Copus and a bank employee established that Mr. Hutcherson completed the

statement and Mr. Copus signed it without reading it. On June 7, Mr. Copus

deposited about $62,000 with Hydro and applied to extend the loan again. On

June 18, Mr. Copus told Mr.

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