United States v. Scott McQuarrie

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMay 26, 2020
Docket18-2132
StatusUnpublished

This text of United States v. Scott McQuarrie (United States v. Scott McQuarrie) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Scott McQuarrie, (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0292n.06

No. 18-2132

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED May 26, 2020 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN SCOTT DAVID MCQUARRIE, ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN ) Defendant-Appellant. )

BEFORE: BATCHELDER, WHITE, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

HELENE N. WHITE, Circuit Judge. Defendant Scott McQuarrie was convicted

following jury and bench trials of: one count of making a false statement in connection with a loan

renewal, one count of making a false statement to an agency of the United States, four counts of

conversion/concealment of property pledged to the Farm Service Agency (FSA), two counts of

making false statements under oath, one count of making a false bankruptcy declaration, one count

of bankruptcy fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit bankruptcy fraud, one count of mail fraud,

and one count of wire fraud. McQuarrie appeals his convictions and sentence. We AFFIRM his

convictions, VACATE his sentence, and REMAND for resentencing.

I. Background

A. Factual Background

McQuarrie obtained several loans in 2001 and 2002 from the FSA to purchase a farm and

finance the farm’s operation. To secure these loans, McQuarrie gave FSA a mortgage and pledged

personal property, including livestock, crops, and machinery, as collateral. McQuarrie never made No. 18-2132, United States v. McQuarrie

his required annual payments on these loans, but instead sought loan assistance, which resulted in

the restructuring of his loans. As part of the loan restructuring process, the FSA required a re-

appraisal of the collateral to “determine whether [it was] feasible for the Government to restructure

the loans versus [liquidate] the account.” R. 268, PID 2654. In December 2009, the appraiser met

McQuarrie on his farm to value the items that had been pledged as collateral. Except for a baler

that McQuarrie represented was owned by his father, McQuarrie claimed ownership of all the

livestock and equipment that was listed as collateral. The FSA ultimately approved McQuarrie’s

request to restructure his loans, and the process was completed on July 20, 2011, when McQuarrie

executed a new mortgage and signed new security agreements and an agreement regarding the use

of collateral. Before McQuarrie signed these documents, James Monroe, an FSA farm loan

manager, explained to him that by signing he was representing that he was the exclusive owner of

the items and agreeing to the terms of the use of collateral agreement, which required that he obtain

permission from the FSA before selling assets pledged as collateral.1

McQuarrie failed to make his required payments in 2011 or 2012. In March of 2012,

McQuarrie’s house was destroyed by a fire, and he requested compensation for the structure from

his insurance company. Because the FSA held a mortgage on the house, the insurance company

mailed McQuarrie a check that was jointly payable to McQuarrie and the FSA, which was

deposited in a supervised bank account controlled by the FSA. In addition to the replacement cost

of the structure, McQuarrie also sought reimbursement for lost household contents. He submitted

receipts to the insurance company through his father’s insurance agency. In March and October

of 2012, the insurance company sent McQuarrie a series of checks totaling $30,824.82 to replace

1 Despite this counseling, McQuarrie soon sold—without the FSA’s permission— equipment, crops, and livestock that he had pledged to the FSA.

-2- No. 18-2132, United States v. McQuarrie

the contents. In March of 2013, McQuarrie asked Betty Garrett, another FSA loan manager, to

release $30,824.82 from the supervised bank account to reimburse McQuarrie for the same

contents. After reviewing the supporting documents from the insurance company that McQuarrie

brought in, FSA issued McQuarrie a check for $30,824.82.2 However, McQuarrie had excluded

the two pages that showed that he had already been reimbursed for the contents. Additionally, as

part of his request for reimbursement, he submitted an estimate for the replacement of a four-

person hot tub. Before doing so, however, he altered the estimate to make it appear to be a receipt.

The true cost of the replacement hot tub was several thousand dollars lower than the price reflected

in the documents submitted by McQuarrie.

McQuarrie never paid the annual payment that was due in April of 2013. Thus, in August

of 2013, Garrett went to McQuarrie’s farm to perform an inspection and update the list of collateral

for new security agreements.3 During that visit, McQuarrie was handed the security agreement

that he had signed in 2011, and he stated that he still owned all of the items that were listed.

McQuarrie also provided updated livestock numbers to be incorporated into the new security

agreement. In October 2013, McQuarrie went to the FSA office to discuss his delinquent payment

and the likelihood that the agency would begin foreclosure proceedings to reclaim the collateral.

During that meeting, Garrett attempted to have him sign the new security agreement that reflected

the updated information that McQuarrie had provided, but McQuarrie refused, claiming that many

2 McQuarrie deposited this check and transferred the funds into his father’s account. His father then transferred $28,163 into McQuarrie’s mother’s bank account, and in April 2013, she wrote a check for that amount to FSA to pay McQuarrie’s year-overdue 2012 farm loan payment. 3 The record reflects that changes to the collateral (replaced items, lost livestock, etc.) would routinely be noted when new security agreements were executed in order to properly account for the FSA’s interest in the collateral. -3- No. 18-2132, United States v. McQuarrie

of the items on the list “had been sold, junked out or scrapped or he never owned [them] in the

first place.” R. 266, PID 3669. He also claimed that some of the cattle belonged to his father.

McQuarrie filed for bankruptcy in February 2014, but soon dismissed his petition, allowing

the FSA to begin the foreclosure process. In April of 2014, Garrett contacted McQuarrie to ask

when the agency could pick up the cattle. Despite having previously claimed complete ownership

of the cattle in 2011 and partial ownership of the cattle in October 2013, McQuarrie now claimed

that he did not own any of the cattle, and that the cattle in fact belonged to his father and another

man. In June of 2014, Garrett returned to McQuarrie’s residence to check the collateral and

observed a fence surrounding the property with a gate across the driveway. Garrett was ultimately

able to access the property to assess the collateral, though it does not appear that she spoke with

McQuarrie. However, on September 9, 2014, Garrett spoke to McQuarrie when he visited the

office. Garrett informed McQuarrie that she was going to have the pledged equipment sold at

auction in October and needed to arrange to pick it up. Upon hearing this, McQuarrie “stated that

he didn’t own any equipment” and had merely listed it on the security agreement “because he

thought he needed it for security to reschedule the loan.” Id. at PID 3676. Garrett asked how he

could sell equipment that was not his and McQuarrie responded that “he was going to be filing

bankruptcy any day and so these issues didn’t matter.” Id.

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