United States v. Holley

23 F.3d 902, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 14511, 1994 WL 258885
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJune 13, 1994
Docket93-01182
StatusPublished
Cited by75 cases

This text of 23 F.3d 902 (United States v. Holley) 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. Holley, 23 F.3d 902, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 14511, 1994 WL 258885 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

GOLDBERG, Circuit Judge:

Jerry D. Holley and Marvin D. Haass appeal their criminal convictions for various crimes committed in the course of the failure of Peoples Savings and Loan Association (“Peoples”). The appellants have raised numerous issues, including challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence, the jury charge, some of the district court’s evidentiary and discovery rulings, and the amount of a restitution order. Although we have considered all of the issues advanced by Holley and Haass, we will not discuss some of the more meritless points that have been raised. We affirm the appellants’s convictions, but vacate the district court’s restitution order.

I. Background

Appellants Holley and Haass were the co-owners and two of the principal officers of Peoples, a state chartered, federally insured financial institution in Llano, Texas. In 1985, Peoples was beset by financial difficulties. Specifically, the appellants were growing increasingly concerned about the amount of Real Estate Owned (“REO”) — property to which Peoples had acquired title — that appeared on Peoples’s balance sheets. Peoples’s REO, acquired primarily through foreclosure, included two apartment buildings in San Angelo, Texas and another apartment building in San Antonio, Texas. Because the market value of these apartments was declining, the appellants wished to sell these properties as soon as possible. More importantly, by selling the buildings, the appellants would avoid having to infuse capital into Peoples. 1 Thus, in mid-1985, Haass and Lloyd Kitchen, an officer of Peoples, opened negotiations with James McClain, a potential buyer of Peoples’s REO.

Meanwhile, Holley and Eileen Marcus, a real estate broker, entered into an arrangement to engage in real estate transactions in and around Dallas,' Texas. Under this arrangement, Marcus was to find various properties that she and Holley could purchase and then resell, and Holley was to obtain the necessary financing. In the fall of 1985, Marcus raised with Holley the possibility of purchasing the Arapaho Station Shopping Center (“Arapaho Station”) in Richardson, Texas. 2 Holley demonstrated an interest in Arapaho Station. Holley and Marcus intended to purchase Arapaho Station and realize a quick profit by immediately reselling the property to a buyer at a price above what they had paid. Such a transaction is often called a “flip” of the property. On October 14, 1985, Marcus signed a contract to purchase Arapaho Station for $5,500,000, but this contract was never closed.

On November 27,1985, Holley entered into a contract of his own to purchase Arapaho Station for $5,500,000. This contract called for a $100,000 letter of credit as earnest money. The amount of earnest money required was later raised to $110,000. Meanwhile, Dallas real estate agent Jerri Cook showed Arapaho Station to Jerry Ezell, an employee of Jim McClain. Holley then met with McClain to discuss a flip of Arapaho Station. McClain became interested when *906 he learned that the potential profit from this transaction could be as high as $3 million.

The other major characters in this case were Cliff Brannon and Don Jones. Bran-non and Jones owned Security Savings Association (“Security”), a state chartered, federally insured financial institution in Plano, Texas. In 1983, Holley and Haass entered into an arrangement with Brannon and Jones whereby Peoples and Security would make personal loans to the owners of the other institution without requiring any security or without inquiring into the adequacy of the collateral for the loans. The purpose of this arrangement was to evade regulations that limit the amount of loans that a savings and loan can make to its owners. Several million dollars in loans were extended through this arrangement.

In 1985, Security also experienced financial difficulties. One drain on Security’s financial condition was a piece of REO called Executive Square. Security’s ownership of Executive Square created the same problems for Security that Peoples’s ownership of its REO created for Peoples. On December 11, 1985, Holley and Haass met with Brannon and Jones to formulate an agreement through which Peoples and Security could remove some of their REO from their books. Also present at this meeting were Peoples’s president Joel Daniel, Lloyd Kitchen, Jim McClain, and Jerry Ezell. Under this agreement, Peoples would sell its REO apartments to First American Land & Development, Inc. (“First American”), a company wholly owned by McClain, and extend to First American a loan for the purchase price of those buildings. At the same time, Security would sell Executive Square to First American, also extending a loan for the purchase price of that property. To recognize these deals as the sale of Peoples’s and Security’s REO, applicable regulations required First American to provide a 10% down payment for each transaction. To satisfy this requirement, the appellants and Brannon and Jones agreed that Peoples and Security would issue a letter of credit to serve as the down payment for the sale of the other institution’s REO to First American. At this meeting, the participants also discussed Holley’s planned sale of Arapaho Station to McClain.

Later, on December 20, 1985, Holley assigned his contract to purchase Arapaho Station to City Group, Inc. (“City Group”), a shell corporation owned by McClain, for ten dollars. Peoples then issued the required $110,000 earnest money letter of credit to the receiver of Arapaho Station. However, this letter of credit had not been approved and was not supported by an obligation requiring City Group to repay Peoples. That evening, Haass and McClain negotiated an illicit “consulting fee” to be paid by McClain to Holley. Testimony at trial revealed that, during this meeting, Haass spoke to Holley on the telephone about the amount of this “fee.” Further, Haass revealed that Holley had agreed to assign the fee to him in order to pay debts that Holley owed him. At the conclusion of the meeting between Haass and McClain, McClain presented Haass with a letter in which he (McClain) agreed to pay Holley $662,000, purportedly for the assignment of the Arapaho Station Contract, on the condition that the deal close by January 8, 1986.

The sale of Arapaho Station did not close on January 8, 1986 as required by the contract. On January 30, 1986, an attorney for the receiver of Arapaho Station presented the $110,000 letter of credit to Peoples for payment. When the attorney arrived at Peoples’s offices, Joel Daniel telephoned Haass and McClain. Haass insisted that the letter of credit “couldn’t be called [because] it wasn’t any good.” McClain said that he would not reimburse Peoples for the payment of the letter of credit. Peoples paid the letter of credit and, the next day, set up a loan on its books to City Group to cover the outlay of funds. This supposed loan was not supported by any promissory note or other specific document from City Group or McClain.

In February of 1986, the receiver of Arapaho Station entered into a contract to sell the shopping center to City Group for $5,500,000. McClain abandoned his hope of realizing a quick profit through a flip of Arapaho Station. Instead, the Arapaho Station transaction and the transaction involving McClain’s “purchase” of Peoples’s and Security’s REO *907

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Bluebook (online)
23 F.3d 902, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 14511, 1994 WL 258885, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-holley-ca5-1994.