United States v. Rudolph W. Beuttenmuller and Larry R. Gill

29 F.3d 973, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 21370, 1994 WL 421598
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 12, 1994
Docket92-9119
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 29 F.3d 973 (United States v. Rudolph W. Beuttenmuller and Larry R. Gill) 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. Rudolph W. Beuttenmuller and Larry R. Gill, 29 F.3d 973, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 21370, 1994 WL 421598 (5th Cir. 1994).

Opinions

E. GRADY JOLLY, Circuit Judge:

Rudolph W. Beuttenmuller and Larry R. Gill appeal criminal convictions arising out of their involvement in a complex real estate sales transaction involving the now-failed Shamrock Federal Savings Bank. The government contends that these defendants conspired with and aided and abetted bank officials in an illegal “cash for trash” scheme to sell — and thus remove from the bank’s records — undesirable real estate owned (“REO”). Various other offenses are alleged to have been involved in the scheme, including a false entry in bank records. Shamrock [975]*975Savings, however, was legally entitled to remove through a sale property classified as REO. It was entitled to search for a purchaser willing to buy the property, to loan up to eighty percent of the purchase price in a non-recourse loan, and to arrange an exchange of equity to accomplish its goal of removing the REO from its books. The only restriction on the bank’s right to remove REO was that its plan and arrangements for disposing of the REO must comply with applicable laws and regulations. Because we conclude that the government failed to prove the defendants’ conduct violated laws of the United States, we reverse their convictions on all counts.

I

In 1986, Jerry D. Lane, the chairman, president, and chief executive officer of Shamrock Savings, a federal stock savings bank with deposits insured by the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance Corporation (“FSLIC”), realized that the savings and loan’s real estate portfolio was rapidly deteriorating. In an effort to stabilize its portfolio, Shamrock Savings foreclosed on seventy-seven Austin, Texas residential lots, known as the Tanglewood property, that secured a loan accounting for more than seventy percent of Shamrock Savings’ total capital.1 Following foreclosure, the Tanglewood property was accounted for as “real estate owned,” or “REO,” on the balance sheet of Shamrock Savings. Not surprisingly, such a large amount of REO caused an accounting problem for Shamrock Savings. If the Tangle-wood property remained classified as REO at the end of the fiscal year, which would close on September 30, Shamrock Savings would be required to create on its balance sheet a substantial reserve against capital. Consequently, Shamrock Savings began looking for a buyer for the Tanglewood property in order to reduce the value of the REO account — an acceptable procedure for the bank to follow so long as requirements of banking regulations were met.

Meanwhile, two investors previously unconnected with Shamrock Savings, Larry Gill and Richard Billings, were experiencing their own financial difficulties. Gill and Billings were investors who formed a joint venture, known as the Mansfield 150 Joint Venture, to manage and develop approximately 155 acres of vacant agricultural land in Mansfield, Texas (referred to hereafter as the “Mansfield property”). The Mansfield property was encumbered by several deeds of trust, securing in excess of $2,220,000 in mortgage and related debt.2 Gill and Billings were personally hable for a substantial portion of this debt, and, because the property itself generated no income, Gill and Billings were required to make interest and principal payments from personal resources.

During the summer of 1986, Gill and Billings were seeking an investor or lender to reheve them of the Mansfield property’s crushing debt. Gill and Billings unsuccessfully contacted more than fifty potential investors without success. Eventually, Gill contacted Jack D. Franks, a real estate consultant, broker, and speculator with ties to numerous thrift institutions.3 Franks, on behalf of Gill and Billings, began negotiations [976]*976with Shamrock Savings through Jerry Lane in hopes of persuading Shamrock Savings to invest in the Mansfield joint venture. A series of meetings and conferences were held during July and August, involving Lane, Franks, Gill, and Billings. These meetings and conferences resulted in the following transaction:

(a) Shamrock Land, a wholly owned subsidiary of Shamrock Savings, would pay $753,290.634 in cash to the Mansfield 150 Joint Venture for a forty-five percent (45%) equity interest in the joint venture. The sole asset of the joint venture was the Mansfield property, which, at the time of the transaction, had an appraised value of approximately $4 million.5
(b) As part of the consideration for the interest in the Mansfield joint venture, Shamrock Land had a non-recourse obligation to pay all future financing payments of the Mansfield 150 Joint Venture arising out of the Mansfield property, including all principal and interest due on its outstanding debt obligations, which would be repaid to Shamrock Land upon sale of the property.6
(c) As partial payment for their equity in the Mansfield property, both Gill and Billings would receive $50,000 each in cash at closing.7
(d) Franks would receive a finder’s fee of $50,000 in return for his services. This fee was to be paid at the closing of the Mansfield property transaction out of the $753,290.63 paid by Shamrock Land.
(e) After closing the Mansfield transaction, Gill and Billings, through the newly created Southmeadow Joint Venture, would buy the Tanglewood property, which had an appraised value of approximately $2.9 million, from Shamrock Savings for $2,725,000.
(f) Of the $753,290.63 paid by Shamrock to the Mansfield 150 Joint Venture for the Mansfield property, $555,000 would be [977]*977paid back to Shamrock Savings as a twenty-percent (20%) down payment on the Tanglewood property. The balance of the $2,725,000 purchase price would be paid through a $2,500,000 non-recourse loan for which neither Gill nor Billings would have personal liability. This non-recourse loan included an interest reserve of approximately $330,-000.
(g) Shamrock Homes Construction, a newly organized wholly owned subsidiary of Shamrock Land, would market the residential lots that make up the Tangle-wood property after the sale of the property to Gill and Billings even though Shamrock had no further property interest in the Tanglewood property. All expenses associated with the maintenance and marketing would be paid by Shamrock Homes. Proceeds from the sale of any of the Tanglewood lots would be used to reduce the balance of the loan held by Shamrock Savings.

In preparation for the closing of the sales transaction and after completing the negotiations among the parties, Lane retained Beut-tenmuller, a partner in the law firm of Gregory, Self & Beuttenmuller, to prepare all the necessary documentation for the transaction. Beuttenmuller structured the closing so that Shamrock Land would first purchase the interest in the Mansfield 150 Joint Venture. After completing that portion of the transaction, the parties would then complete the sale of the Tanglewood property. All would occur at Beuttenmuller’s offices on September 30, 1986, the last day in Shamrock Savings’ fiscal year.

On the day of the closing, it became clear that all would not go as originally planned. At the closing, Franks increased his finder’s fee from $50,000 to $100,000, a move that required Shamrock to supply an additional $50,000 cash at closing.

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Bluebook (online)
29 F.3d 973, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 21370, 1994 WL 421598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rudolph-w-beuttenmuller-and-larry-r-gill-ca5-1994.