United States v. Kenneth L. Musgrave and Marshall Womack

483 F.2d 327
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1973
Docket72-2305
StatusPublished
Cited by88 cases

This text of 483 F.2d 327 (United States v. Kenneth L. Musgrave and Marshall Womack) 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. Kenneth L. Musgrave and Marshall Womack, 483 F.2d 327 (5th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

RIVES, Circuit Judge:

Appellants, Kenneth L. Musgrave and Marshall Womack, along with Jack Bryant and Homer E. Koon, Jr., were charged in a seven-count indictment 1 *329 with violation of 18 U.S.C.A. §§ 371, 2 657 3 and 1006 4 stemming from their involvement in a purported plot to defraud the Home Savings Association of Odessa, Texas. Appellants’ convictions in separate, prior trials were both reversed by this Court. 5 On retrial below, Mus-grave was found guilty under Counts 1, 2, 4 and 6 and received a five-year concurrent sentence on each Count. Womack was convicted on Counts 1, 2 and 6 and acquitted on Count 4. He received a three-year concurrent sentence on each Count.

Appellants’ able counsel weave a hy-pertechnieal web of ingenious arguments contending that the trial court made at least ten reversible errors. Nonetheless, we find that each appellant received a fair trial and we affirm.

THE PLOT TO DEFRAUD

The complex series of financial transactions which form the heart of the alleged fraud are lucidly delineated in this Court’s prior opinions in United States v. Musgrave, 5 Cir. 1971, 444 F.2d 755, and United States v. Womack, 5 Cir. 1972, 454 F.2d 1337. We merely sketch the factual outline necessary for rational discussion of the contested portions of the trial below.

*330 The government alleged, and the jury must have found, the existence of a single multi-stage conspiracy which had as its central purpose defrauding the Odessa Home Savings Association.

According to the prosecution, Mus-grave, then Chairman of the Board of the Association, arranged for the granting of two loans — one to Womack and the other to Womack’s nominee, Koon. 6 The loans were designed to enable Womack to purchase Musgrave’s controlling interest in the Association [56% of the total outstanding shares]. Musgrave’s attorney, Bryant, prepared the contract, disbursed the loan proceeds, and collected a large fee.

The two loans, purportedly prompted by Musgrave’s manipulations, consisted of a $960,000 loan to Womack secured by Womack’s interest in the Trans-American Building in Fort Worth, Texas, and a $500,000 loan to Koon secured by a 1,670 acre farm near Toyah, Texas.

The various charges in the indictment stripped to their core comprise one basic allegation — that the four individuals named in the indictment misled the Association into making two extraordinarily large loans secured by grossly inadequate collateral. The strength of this central allegation rests almost entirely on the testimony of two government, expert witnesses, Charles Herman and E. T. Compere, who calculated the fair market value of Womack's interest in the Trans-American Building to be $145,000 and $232,000, respectively. Compere also placed a $110,000 value on the Toyah farm. 7

Compared to the testimony of Herman and Compere, the original appraisals submitted to the Association by Mus-grave (which set the value of Womack’s interest in the Trans-American Building *331 at $1,750,000 and the value of the Toyah farm at $667,000) were outrageously inflated. 8

ISSUES ON APPEAL

Musgrave raises eight issues on appeal, and Womack raises ten. With a few exceptions, each appellant seeks reversal on the same grounds. Some of the issues overlap, and others are too ephemeral to deserve extended discussion. Those asserted errors which merit appellate consideration are set out below with Musgrave’s and Womack’s distinct positions noted in the instances where they differ.

I. AIDING AND ABETTING AN ACQUITTED PRINCIPAL

A. Count 4 — Count 4 of the indictment charged Musgrave and Womack with aiding and abetting Bryant who allegedly shared in the proceeds of the fraud. Both Appellants argue on appeal that Bryant’s acquittal in the first trial constitutes a binding judicial pronouncement that Bryant’s act was innocent, thereby absolving appellants from any crime predicated upon aiding Bryant.

In a three-pronged response, the government argues that Bryant’s acquittal does not preclude conviction of Mus-grave and Womack in a subsequent trial under Count 4 because:

1) Conviction of a principal is not a prerequisite to conviction of the principal’s aider or abettor; the only indispensable element in the conviction of the aider is the existence of a criminal act.

2) The holding in United States v. Musgrave, supra, that no substantial evidence existed to support the jury’s verdict on any of the counts against Bryant established only that the government had failed to prove its case against Bryant beyond a reasonable doubt; it did not clothe Bryant’s act with a permanent cloak of innocence.

The testimony of Nathan Brown [App. pp. 333-370], not available at Bryant’s trial, produced additional evidence at the second trial shedding new light on Bryant’s link with the alleged fraud.

3) The court in United States v. Musgrave, supra, after ordering Bryant acquitted and reversing the conviction of Musgrave, remanded the case against Musgrave as to Count 4 impliedly endorsing reprosecution of Musgrave as Bryant’s abettor, or at least recognizing the possibility of such reprosecution.

We agree with the government. Bryant’s acquittal does not foreclose appellants’ convictions under Count 4.

Neither of the two principal cases upon which the appellants rely — Shut-tlesworth v. Birmingham, 1963, 373 U.S. 262, 83 S.Ct. 1130, 10 L.Ed.2d 335, and Edwards v. United States, 5 Cir. 1960, 286 F.2d 681 — are dispositive of the issue presented here.

The two petitioners in Shuttlesworth, Negro ministers charged with inciting and aiding Negro students in a “sit-down demonstration,” were held incapable of being guilty of aiding principals whose own convictions had been overturned on the ground that their peaceful sit-down demonstration was a constitutionally protected act. Hence, the court merely reiterated the long-standing maxim that “there can be no conviction for aiding and abetting someone to do an innocent act.”

In Edwards v. United States, this Court reversed Edwards’ conviction for aiding and abetting the principal, Evans, on the ground that the trial court’s charge to the jury erroneously directed a verdict of guilty against Edwards by referring to Evans’ guilty plea when no *332 documentation establishing the existence of the guilty plea had been introduced.

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Bluebook (online)
483 F.2d 327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kenneth-l-musgrave-and-marshall-womack-ca5-1973.