United States v. Doyle Marshall Willey, Sr.

57 F.3d 1374
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 8, 1995
Docket93-2930
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 57 F.3d 1374 (United States v. Doyle Marshall Willey, Sr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Doyle Marshall Willey, Sr., 57 F.3d 1374 (5th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

GARWOOD, Circuit Judge:

Doyle Marshall Willey (Willey) appeals his convictions on thirty-one counts of bankruptcy fraud, conspiracy to commit bankruptcy fraud, aiding and abetting the making of a false statement on a loan application, aiding and abetting the concealment of assets from the Resolution Trust Corporation (RTC) and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), and aiding and abetting money laundering. We affirm in part, reverse in part, vacate the sentence, and remand for resen-tencing.

Facts and Proceedings Below

In January 1988, Sam Houston National Bank (Sam Houston Bank) of Huntsville, Texas, failed. Willey, a Huntsville real estate and timberland developer, was a director of Sam Houston Bank; Albert Homaday (Hornaday) was its president from August 1987 until January 1988 and was a life-long friend of Willey’s. 1 While investigating the bank’s failure, the FBI uncovered potentially fraudulent activity with respect to a piece of property in Sam Houston Bank’s real estate owned portfolio (the Richards Road property). This information led investigators to inquire into the activities of Willey, Horna-day, Willey’s wife, Kimberly Bacon (Bacon), 2 and Shadylane Farms, Inc. (Shadylane Farms), a corporation set up by Willey and Bacon and wholly-owned by Bacon. This investigation revealed that Willey, who had declared personal and corporate bankruptcy in 1990 and thereby walked away from approximately $46 million in unsecured debt, had undertaken, with the assistance of Bacon, Hornaday, and Shadylane Farms, to shield the majority of his and his company’s assets from creditors.

In June 1992, federal agents applied for and were granted warrants to search both the home in which Willey and Bacon were then living (the Sunset Lake Road house) and the Richards Road property, which Sha-dylane Farms had just purchased from Hor-naday and into which Willey and Bacon were then in the processing of moving. The voluminous documentary evidence seized during the search revealed a labyrinthine series of financial transactions involving numerous corporate entities with which Willey was associated. 3 Although Willey and his company, MWI Land, Inc. (MWI), received significant amounts of money from these various corporations and had access to and/or control over approximately twenty corporate and personal bank accounts, Willey was not listed as an employee in state-mandated reports for any *1378 company other than MWI. 4 In addition, although Bacon, or Willey and Bacon, were signatories on most of the accounts, none were in Willey’s name; most had been opened as “trust” accounts, 5 with Willey’s interest undisclosed, by Bacon in her own name, or in a corporate name.

Based on this information, Willey, Bacon, Hornaday, and Shadylane Farms were charged in a 32-eount indictment with bankruptcy fraud, conspiracy to commit bankruptcy fraud, aiding and abetting the making of a false statement on a loan application, aiding and abetting the concealment of assets from the RTC and the FDIC, and aiding and abetting money laundering. 6 The government contended that, beginning in 1986, Wil-ley funneled money belonging to him and MWI through the corporate and personal accounts that he controlled, but with which he was not conspicuously associated, enabling him to continue to enjoy assets that should have become part of his and MWI’s bankruptcy estates. Focusing on two pools of money totalling $400,000 that had been paid to MWI in July 1986, the government painstakingly traced the money through a convoluted series of transfers from the various nominee and “trustee” accounts that Willey controlled. The evidence showed that, from 1986 to 1992, Willey and Bacon used the money in these accounts to purchase various assets — land, cattle, a fur coat, vehicles, mineral interests, and most importantly, the Richards Road property and improvements thereon. We will not here recount the intricate web of transfers and transactions by which most of these assets were shown to have come into Willey’s possession. Because the transactions related to the financing, improvement, and purchase of the Richards Road property were central to many of the charges in this ease, however, a somewhat more detailed recounting of them is appropriate.

The Richards Road property was a 61-acre tract of land with a house. 7 When Sam Houston Bank hired Hornaday in August 1987, it gave him, as part of his compensation package, a lease purchase agreement on the property under which he paid $200 a month in rent. After Sam Houston Bank failed, the FDIC, in its capacity as receiver, decided to advertise the property for public bids. Two bids were submitted, one from Willey, acting as broker for D.E. Hughes, for $200,000 and one from Sam Dominey (Dominey) for $200,-100; the appraised market value of the property was $244,000. The FDIC accepted Do-miney’s bid, but Hornaday filed an affidavit in the county property records asserting the priority of his purchase option, and Dominey refused to close the purchase with this cloud on the title. Thereafter, Hornaday submitted a bid on April 21, 1988, 8 in the amount of $200,100, and the sale was closed May 31, 1988. 9

*1379 From the time Hornaday purchased the Richards Road property in May 1988 until June 1989, when Shadylane Farms entered into a lease with an option to purchase the property, Willey, through various of his nominee accounts, advanced Hornaday money to pay the mortgage on the property; after June 1989, Shadylane Farms made the payments. 10 Nevertheless, Hornaday continued to live on the property until Shadylane Farms bought it outright in June 1992. In addition, the government introduced substantial evidence that Willey was making improvements on the Richards Road house long before Shadylane Farms actually purchased it in June 1992. 11 Payments for these improvements came from various of the accounts to which Willey had access. 12 Willey characterized the payments to Hornaday for the mortgage and improvements on the Richards Road property as loans, but was forced to admit that there were no promissory notes memorializing these alleged loans and that he had not listed the loans on his bankruptcy petition as a debt owed him.

Following ten days of testimony, a jury found Willey guilty on all counts. 13 The district court sentenced Willey to 60 months’ imprisonment on the conspiracy, bankruptcy fraud, and concealment from federal agency counts (counts 1 and 3-24), 24 months’ imprisonment on the false statement count (count 2), and 97 months’ imprisonment on the money laundering counts (counts 26-31), all sentences to run concurrently.

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Bluebook (online)
57 F.3d 1374, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-doyle-marshall-willey-sr-ca5-1995.