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United States v. Daddona, 93-7338 (1994)

Court: Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit Number: 93-7338 Visitors: 23
Filed: Aug. 17, 1994
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: Opinions of the United 1994 Decisions States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 8-17-1994 United States of America v. Daddona Precedential or Non-Precedential: Docket 93-7338 Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994 Recommended Citation "United States of America v. Daddona" (1994). 1994 Decisions. Paper 117. http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994/117 This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinio
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                                                                                                                           Opinions of the United
1994 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
                                                                                                                              for the Third Circuit


8-17-1994

United States of America v. Daddona
Precedential or Non-Precedential:

Docket 93-7338




Follow this and additional works at: http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994

Recommended Citation
"United States of America v. Daddona" (1994). 1994 Decisions. Paper 117.
http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_1994/117


This decision is brought to you for free and open access by the Opinions of the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit at Villanova
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                 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                     FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT

                          ___________

                          No. 93-7338
                          No. 93-7683
                          No. 93-7725
                          No. 93-7351
                          ___________


    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,

              Appellee,

              vs.

    JOHN L. "JACK" DADDONA,

              Appellant in Nos. 93-7338, 93-7683, and 93-7725.

    SIDNEY COHEN,
              Appellant in No. 93-7351

                          ___________

         ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
             FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA
        (D.C. Criminal Action Nos. CR-92-179-01 and -02)
                           ___________


                      ARGUED MAY 19, 1994

            BEFORE: BECKER, LEWIS, Circuit Judges,
                  and IRENAS, District Judge.*

                    (Filed August 17, 1994)

                          ___________




     * Honorable Joseph E. Irenas, United States District Judge
for the District of New Jersey, sitting by designation.
David Barasch
United States Attorney
Kim David Daniel (Argued)
Assistant United States Attorney
Federal Building, 228 Walnut Street
Harrisburg, PA 17108

          Attorneys for Appellee


James G. Wiles, Esquire (Argued)
Law Offices of James G. Wiles
1411 Walnut Street, Suite 200
Philadelphia, PA 19102

James L. Heidecker, Jr., Esquire
Lawyers Professional Building
27 North Street, 4th Floor
Allentown, PA 18101

          Attorneys for Appellant Daddona


Francis Recchuiti, Esquire (Argued)
Vangrossi & Recchuiti
319 Swede Street
Norristown, PA 19401

          Attorneys for Appellant Cohen


                          ___________

                      OPINION OF THE COURT
                          ___________



IRENAS, District Judge.

     Appellants were convicted of various counts of fraud

stemming from their attempts to disclaim performance and payment

bonds issued in connection with a construction project.   Pursuant

to U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b), the trial court determined the amount of

loss for sentencing purposes to be in excess of $1,500,000, most

of which represented the mortgagee's cost to complete the project
after taking it over from the mortgagor/developer. Although the

mortgagee was not an obligee under the bonds, the district court

nonetheless concluded that its loss was properly attributable to

the appellants' fraudulent conduct.

     Appellants raise a number of challenges to their convictions

and sentences and to the district court's denial of motions for a

new trial.   We will affirm the judgments of conviction and the

district court's denial of appellants' motions for a new trial.

However, because we find that the trial court improperly

calculated the losses resulting from the appellants' fraudulent

conduct, we will vacate the sentences and remand both cases for

resentencing.



                                I.

                   FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

     Appellant Sidney Cohen ("Cohen") was a principal in Green

Hill Associates ("Green Hill"), a limited partnership and the

developer of the Green Hill Apartment Building Project ("the

project") in Susquehanna Township, Pennsylvania.   The project was

financed by an $8.9 million mortgage loan to Green Hill from the

Summit Tax Exempt Bond Fund, L.P. ("Summit"), which in turn was

headed by Stuart J. Boesky ("Boesky").

     Construction on the project began in July of 1986.    By the

spring of 1987, the project was substantially behind schedule.

Cohen sought to replace the general contractor, Susquehanna

Construction Company ("Susquehanna"), with Eastern Consolidated
Utilities, Inc. ("ECU"), a building contractor owned and operated

by appellant John L. ("Jack") Daddona ("Daddona").    Summit agreed

to the substitution, provided ECU obtain performance and payment

bonds in the amount of $3 million.1 Summit also threatened

foreclosure unless the bonds were produced by July 29, 1987.

     Daddona consulted Daniel Culnen ("Culnen") of the Culnen &

Hamilton Agency ("C & H"), one of the largest independent surety

bond brokers on the East Coast and Daddona's long-time insurance

agent.   He advised Culnen of Summit's demand, and Culnen agreed

to issue the bonds through Employers Insurance of Wausau

("Wausau"), for whom he was a registered independent agent.

However, as a condition to his agreement, Culnen required that

Daddona, Cohen, and their families agree in writing to personally

indemnify Wausau for any claims paid on the bonds.2

     By letter dated June 15, 1987, Culnen advised Summit that in

the event ECU were to become the project's general contractor, it

     1
        A performance bond guarantees the owner that the general
contractor will perform his contract. A payment bond, sometimes
referred to as a labor and materials bond, guarantees the that
the general contractor's subcontractors and materialmen will be
paid for their services. The bonds are usually issued in tandem.
It should be noted that while Green Hill, as owner, had rights
under both bonds, and the subcontractors and materialmen had
rights under the payment bond, Summit was not an obligee under
either bond. See p. 24, infra.
     2
        The requirement that Cohen execute an indemnity agreement
was unusual in that it essentially vitiated any benefits that
might have inured to Cohen from the bonds. At trial, Culnen
explained his concern that Cohen, who had earlier filed what
Culnen considered to be specious claims against the bonds held by
Susquehanna, would make similar claims against ECU's bonds. The
indemnity agreement was expressly designed to prevent Green Hill
from filing claims under the bonds.
would be able to obtain the necessary bonding.   Thereafter, on

July 6, 1987, Cohen, Daddona, and their families executed an

indemnity agreement.   On July 20, 1987, ECU and Green Hill

entered into a $3.4 million contract for the completion of the

project.

     On July 27, 1987, Culnen directed his bond manager, Pamela

Hayes ("Hayes"), to prepare the bonds on Wausau forms.   Hayes

prepared the bonds, affixed the Wausau corporate seal, and

attached power of attorney forms.   Hayes, purportedly at Culnen's

behest, did not follow the usual procedure and give the bonds a

new number. Rather, she affixed a number that had been used on a

previous ECU project and then twice witnessed Culnen's signature

under the fictitious name of "B. Adams."

     Culnen signed both bonds and delivered them to Daddona along

with a cover letter explaining the method of calculating the bond

premium.   Although Culnen did have authority to execute and

deliver Wausau bonds, he breached his own agreement with Wausau

by failing to report his execution and delivery of the bonds and

by failing to obtain Wausau's prior approval.

     Daddona signed the bonds on July 29, 1987, and forwarded

them to Cohen.   Cohen witnessed Daddona's signatures on the bonds

and directed his attorney, Mitchell Leiderman ("Leiderman"), to

forward copies of the bonds to Summit, which Leiderman did on

July 30, 1994.   Summit halted its foreclosure proceedings, and

ECU commenced work on the project in August of 1987.



     A.    Padding the Invoice
     In August Culnen prepared and mailed to Daddona an invoice

for the bond premiums in the amount of $42,413.   Shortly

thereafter Cohen called Culnen and instructed him to prepare a

new invoice in the amount of $52,413, the difference representing

an unrelated $10,000 consulting fee owed by Cohen to Culnen.

Daddona indicated that he had no objections to the request.

     At Daddona's direction, Culnen forwarded the upwardly

revised invoice to Cohen, who submitted it to Summit on October

7, 1987, as part of a monthly requisition.   When Summit released

the funds to Cohen on October 21, 1987, Cohen immediately

forwarded the monies to Culnen and received a check back from

Culnen for $10,000 on November 27, 1987.

     Culnen retained the remaining $42,413 for a period of time,

but was pressured by Cohen and Daddona to divide the money.

Consequently, Culnen agreed to give Daddona a $32,413 credit

against his outstanding account balance, which was memorialized

in a credit memo dated May 11, 1988.   On May 16, 1988, Culnen

forwarded a second check for $10,000 to Cohen.



     B. Resuming Construction

     Once the new general contractor was in place, Cohen sought

to entice the subcontractors, many of whom had left the project

for non-payment, to return to work on the project.   At several

jobsite meetings conducted in August of 1987, Cohen and ECU

employees displayed copies of the bonds and assured the

subcontractors that the bonds guaranteed their payment.     At least

two subcontractors, Thomas Strawbridge and Robert Yingling,
subsequently executed contracts with ECU for work on the project.

Copies of the bond were also mailed to Les Stewart ("Stewart") of

York Excavating Company ("York"), thereby inducing him to return

to work.



     C.    Disclaiming the Bonds

     By the end of 1987, the project was still behind schedule,

and Summit was again threatening foreclosure.   In or around

December of 1987, Cohen and Daddona returned the original bonds

to Culnen without informing Summit or the subcontractors.3     By

January of 1988, most of the subcontractors had left the site for

non-payment, and on February 5, 1988, Summit commenced

foreclosure proceedings.

     In a settlement reached on April 8, 1988, Summit agreed to

pay Green Hill $216,000 less the amount of any unpaid

subcontractor bills then due and owing on the project.   In

return, Green Hill agreed to deed the project to Boesky's

nominee, Green Hill Investors,4 to assign to Summit Green Hill's

rights (but not its obligations) in the contract with ECU, and to
     3
        While it may be that Cohen or Daddona thought that by
returning the original bonds to the issuer they were limiting the
rights of potential claimants, and thereby their indemnity
obligations to Wausau, there is no legal basis for concluding
that the rights of parties who entered into contracts or
performed labor in reliance on the bonds could have their rights
unilaterally terminated in this manner. Indeed, the indictment
itself was premised, at least in part, on the validity of the
bonds. If the bonds were in fact not valid when issued, there
could be no fraud in disavowing them.
     4
        For convenience, we will refer to Summit and Green Hill
Investors collectively as "Summit."
escrow Cohen's beneficial interest in the bonds to pay off liens

that might accrue on the property in the four months following

the settlement.5

     In March, Wausau began to receive claims on the payment

bond.       On March 16, 1988, the attorney for the International

Brotherhood of Electrical Workers Union ("IBEW") filed a claim

against the bond with Wausau's home office in Wisconsin and

forwarded copies to Cohen and Daddona.       On March 21, 1988, Jack

Meyers ("Meyers") of Construction Management Corporation ("CMC")

also made a claim by sending a copy of the claim letter to

Wausau's regional bond manager in Totowa, New Jersey, Ken Gelok

("Gelok"). CMC and York filed formal claims against Wausau on

April 14, 1988.

     Gelok was surprised by the claims.       Company policy required

both regional manager and home office approval prior to the

issuance of any bonds in excess of $750,000.       Gelok knew nothing

of the bonds and called Culnen on or about March 25, 1987, to

clarify the situation.       Culnen advised Gelok that the claims were

not valid because he had the cancelled bonds in his possession.

     At a meeting in Culnen's office on March 29, 1988,      Culnen
        5
        The four-month escrow period tracked the Pennsylvania
statute of limitations for the filing of mechanic's liens. 49
P.S. § 1502. It is clear that Green Hill's assignment was
strictly limited to the possible liability to existing unpaid
subcontractors who were either known at the closing or who filed
claims within four months. The essence of the settlement was that
Summit's nominees would take the project free and clear of any
existing claims of ECU's subcontractors. In fact, those debts
were paid by deductions from the $216,000 owed to Green Hill, and
Summit's limited rights under the four-month escrow period were
never exercised.
delivered the bonds to Gelok and falsely assured him that the

bonds were not valid, that he had never signed them, and that

someone else -- perhaps Meyers -- had forged his signature.

Culnen repeated this tale in a letter dated April 15, 1988, in

which he advised Gelok that the bonds were forgeries and that

York's and CMC's claims were "phoney claims filed by crooks who

probably stole blank forms and forged [Culnen's] signature."

     On April 20, 1988, Gelok again met with Culnen at the

latter's office.   During the course of the meeting, Gelok advised

Culnen that he had been unable to contact Cohen to confirm

Culnen's story about the bonds.     Culnen then picked up the

telephone, dialed some numbers, and handed the phone to Gelok.     A

man who identified himself as Sidney Cohen informed Gelok that

"there was no bond in force, there never was and there never

would be."   Daddona App. at 325.    The man also advised Gelok that

the bonds on which Meyers' and Stewart's claims were based were

forgeries, and that Meyers may have been the one who forged

Culnen's signature.

     On April 22, 1988, Culnen wrote a second letter to Gelok, in

which he informed Gelok that he had contacted Daddona, then on a

hunting trip in Alaska, and "the conclusion we [i.e., Culnen and

Daddona] came to is . . . that Meyers signed the bond form, which

was blank, in Jack's office pending finalization of negotiations

with the owner."   Daddona App. at 223-24.    Relying on the letters

from Culnen and Gelok's conversation with Cohen, Wausau advised

Meyers by letter dated April 20, 1988, that no Wausau bonds

existed on the Green Hill project.     Thereafter, on April 26,
1988, Wausau issued a second letter, denying Stewart's and

Meyers' bond claims on the grounds that no valid bonds existed

for the project.    On May 6, 1988, Wausau denied the IBEW claim.

     On June 16, 1988, Summit, while in the midst of hiring a new

general contractor, sent a letter to Wausau inquiring about the

status of the bonds.    Culnen advised Wausau by letter dated June

21, 1988, that he had neither executed nor delivered the bonds.

Wausau subsequently advised Summit on June 27, 1988, that no

bonds existed on the project.    On September 30, 1988, Summit

filed a formal claim against the bonds, in which it alleged that

ECU's failure to perform had cost it $3 million in damages.      The

claim was denied by Wausau in a letter dated October 7, 1988.

The letter recited that no valid bonds existed on the project,

and that even if there were valid bonds, Summit was not a proper

claimant.



     D.      The Unravelling of the Scheme

     In July of 1988, Meyers contacted the United States Postal

Inspectors, prompting an investigation into the project.    On

August 5, 1988, grand jury subpoenas were served on Pamela Hayes

and C & H.    On October 13, 1988, Culnen admitted to Wausau that

he had indeed executed and delivered the bonds in July of 1987

and that they were not forgeries.    Culnen and C & H were indicted

in June of 1991.    In November of 1991, Culnen entered into a plea

agreement by which he agreed to plead guilty to two counts of

mail fraud and cooperate with the government in its investigation

of Cohen and Daddona.
     Appellants were indicted in July of 1992 and charged with

conspiracy to commit mail fraud and two counts of mail fraud.       In

addition, Cohen was charged with conspiracy to transport a

fraudulently obtained security (the $52,413 check issued by

Summit for the inflated bond premium), interstate transportation

of a fraudulently obtained security, and interstate

transportation of a mail fraud victim.   The frauds on which the

indictment was based were threefold: (1) a fraud on Wausau in not

reporting the issuance of the bonds or the receipt of premiums

therefor; (2) a fraud on Summit by inflating the invoice for the

bond premium to cover an unrelated indebtedness to C & H; and (3)

a fraud on potential bond claimants by first returning the

original bonds for attempted cancellation and then claiming that

the signatures were forgeries.

     A five-day joint trial of the appellants was held from

September 14-18, 1992.   The jury convicted both men of conspiracy

to commit mail fraud and of the two counts of mail fraud.     The

jury also convicted Cohen of interstate transportation of a

fraudulently obtained security, but acquitted him of conspiracy

to transport a fraudulently obtained security.6

     On September 25, 1992, appellant Cohen moved for a new trial

and, in the alternative, for a judgment of acquittal.   That same

day, appellant Daddona filed motions to set aside the verdict and

for a new trial.   In October, both parties filed motions for a


     6
        The charge of interstate transportation of a fraud victim
was dismissed by the judge during the trial.
new trial based on newly-discovered evidence.     All of these

motions were denied by memorandum and order dated January 25,

1993.

     Appellant Daddona subsequently filed two additional motions

for new trial on the grounds of newly-discovered evidence, which

were denied by the district court initially and on

reconsideration.     Each of the motions was followed by a motion to

this Court to remand the matter back to the district court, which

were also denied.



     E.     The Sentencing

     The presentence reports prepared by the U.S. Probation

Office set each appellant's base offense level at 6, applying

U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1.7    Then, relying on the findings of fact made by

the court during the Culnen sentencing, the probation officer

calculated the approximate amount of losses to the victims to be

$1,562,500.8    Pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(1)(j), he

     7
        Counts 2 (transportation of a fraudulently obtained
security), 3 (conspiracy to commit mail fraud), 4 and 5 (mail
fraud) were counted as a single offense pursuant to U.S.S.G.
§ 3D1.2(d).
     8
        See Presentence Report of John L. Daddona at 14;
Presentence Report of Sidney Cohen at 14:
     The monetary losses caused by the offenses are
     $1,562,500. This amount is based on the Court's
     finding regarding losses in the case of Daniel J.
     Culnen (Dkt. #1:CR-91-105-001). In the Court's
     sentencing memorandum in the Culnen case, filed on July
     30, 1992, it was determined that for the purposes of
     sentencing, approximate losses to victims were as
     follows:

        Summit Bond Tax Exempt Fund, L.P.       $1,500,000
recommended a nine-level increase to the base offense level.       The

probation officer also recommended a two-level increase for more

than minimal planning under U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b)(2)(A).

     All sides objected to the offense level calculation.    Cohen

contended that the losses claimed were either erroneous, not

covered by the bonds, or settled prior to sentencing.    Daddona

insisted that he was ignorant of any wrongdoing in the issuance

of the bonds, and could not therefore be held accountable for

losses incurred.   In the alternative, Daddona argued that

Summit's losses could not be included in the calculation, as

Summit was not a co-obligee on the bond.    The government, on the

other hand, objected to the lack of a two-point enhancement to

Cohen's offense level for obstruction of justice.

     Loss hearings were held on March 30 and April 2, 1993.    The

government proffered the testimony of Norman Tandy, of Norman

Tandy & Associates, the company hired by Summit to oversee the

completion of the project.9   Tandy essentially undertook a "cost

of completion" analysis -- examining the Summit invoices for the

period after Eastern left the project site to determine how much

more Summit spent because of the Eastern default, then


     Construction Management Corporation/
          Aljohn, Inc.                            53,000
     Yingling Construction Company                 9,500
                                              $1,562,500
     9
        Tandy did not testify in person at the loss hearings.
Rather, the government moved to supplement the record by
incorporating the testimony Tandy had given at the sentencing
hearing for Daniel Culnen, which motion was granted on March 9,
1993.
subtracting the cost of changes to the project specifications and

the amount of the original Eastern contract.   He concluded that

Summit had suffered losses of $1,524,761 as the result of

appellants' fraudulent conduct.

     Appellant Daddona offered rebuttal testimony from S. Leonard

DiDonato of Hill, International, who was qualified as an expert

construction analyst.   DiDonato independently reviewed Summit's

records and Tandy's calculations, indicating places where he

believed Summit had overspent or Tandy had overestimated the

amount of loss. From these he concluded that Summit could have

completed the project for $414,719 less than the Eastern contract

price, and hence had suffered no loss.

     The trial court resolved the various objections to the

presentence report in a memorandum dated April 13, 1993.    Most of

the discussion focused on the amount of loss that properly could

be attributed to the defendants' fraudulent conduct.     Recognizing

that each of the experts were "less than fully objective,"    the

court set out to determine who was the more reliable.    It noted

that Tandy's calculations had been adopted at the Culnen

sentencing and therefore had some indicia of reliability.     The

court also contrasted the "carefully and specifically enumerated"

deductions of Tandy with the "speculative and repetitive

deductions" and "artificial numbers" used by DiDonato.

     The Court found Tandy's testimony to be more dependable, and

adopted the figure of $1,524,761 as the amount of Summit's loss
and $1,568,830 as the total loss for sentencing purposes.10

However, the court declined to impose a two-level increase for

more than minimal planning and denied the government's request

for a two-level enhancement to Cohen's offense level for

obstruction of justice.   The decision left each appellant with an

offense level of 15 and a criminal history category of I,

resulting in a sentencing range of 18 to 24 months.    On

application of the appellants, the court granted a downward

departure and sentenced appellants to nine-month terms of

imprisonment.11


                                 II

                          LEGAL ANALYSIS

     Both appellants challenge their judgments of conviction and

sentences, and Daddona also appeals the district court's denial

of his second and third motions for new trial.   We have appellate

jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291 over final orders of a

district court and jurisdiction pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3742 to

review sentences imposed under the United States Sentencing

Guidelines.

     Appellants' challenges to their convictions and to the

district court's denial of Daddona's new trial motions are

     10
        The court also found that Wausau had incurred $44,069 in
legal fees as a result of the fraud. It did not, however,
address the claims of the other subcontractors, concluding that
Summit's loss alone was sufficient to place defendants in the $1-
$2 million range.
     11
          Appellants are out on bail pending appeal.
without merit.12   However, their claims regarding the calculation

of their sentences require further analysis.



                     A. The Standard of Review

     "When reviewing the sentencing decisions of the district

courts, '[w]e exercise plenary review over legal questions about

the meaning of the sentencing guidelines, but apply the

deferential clearly erroneous standard to factual determinations


     12
         Daddona's claims included the following: (1) the
evidence was insufficient to support his convictions; (2) the
trial court erred in denying appellant's motion for a new trial
based on an alleged Brady violation without conducting an
evidentiary hearing; (3) the trial court erred in admitting
certain government exhibits and testimony; (4) the trial court
erred in allowing the government to use a summary chart during
its closing arguments; (5) the trial court erred in submitting
the indictment to the jury, in drafting the verdict form, and in
answering a question from the jury; and (6) the trial court
improperly allowed the government to question Daddona about a
"check-swapping" arrangement.
     Cohen's claims included the following: (1) the trial court
erred in denying appellant's motion for new trial based on an
alleged Brady violation without conducting an evidentiary
hearing; (2) the evidence was insufficient to support his
convictions; (3) the trial court erred in permitting the
introduction of an "inaccurate and fabricated 'closing
statement'"; (4) the trial court erred in allowing the government
to use a summary chart during its closing arguments; (5) the
trial court erred in submitting the indictment to the jury, in
drafting the verdict form, and in answering a question from the
jury; (6) the trial court improperly permitted evidence of a
"check-swapping" arrangement; and (7) the trial court erred in
incorporating by reference testimony from the Culnen sentencing
hearing.
     Cohen also challenged the failure of the district court to
depart downward, either based on his acceptance of responsibility
or on his age and infirmity. However, because on remand the
district court is free to revisit the issue of departures from
the properly calculated sentencing range, we need not consider
these claims here.
underlying their application.'" United States v. Fuentes, 
954 F.2d 151
, 152-53 (3d Cir.), cert. denied, --- U.S. ----, 
112 S. Ct. 2950
, 
119 L. Ed. 2d 573
(1992), quoting United States v.

Inigo, 
925 F.2d 641
, 658 (3d Cir.1991).

     Under the Sentencing Guidelines, the base offense level for

fraud is six, U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(a), which must be increased

according to the size of the loss attributed to the fraud.

U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b).    Because appellants challenge the district

court's interpretation of the "loss" concept in § 2F1.1(b), our

review is plenary.    See 
Kopp, 951 U.S. at 526
; United States v.

Bierley, 
922 F.2d 1061
, 1064 (3d Cir. 1990).




   B.     Calculating the Amount of Loss for Sentencing Purposes

     The version of U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b) in effect at the time the

offenses were committed set forth the following method of

adjusting the offense level :
     (1) If the loss exceeded $2,000, increase the offense
     level as follows:
     Loss                              Increase in Level
     . . .
     (G) $100,001 - $200,000                add 6
     (H) $200,001 - $500,000                add 7
     (I) $500,001 - $1,000,000              add 8
     (J) $1,000,001 - $2,000,000            add 9
     . . . .


U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b) (Nov. 1987); see generally U.S.S.G. § 2B1.1,

commentary at 2 ("'Loss' means the value of the property taken,

damages, or destroyed.").13   The district court found the total
     13
        Although it is proper to use the Guidelines in effect at
the time of sentencing, see U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11(a), application of
loss for sentencing purposes to be $1,568,830. U.S.S.G.

§ 2F1.1(b). Appellants assert, and we agree, that the losses

claimed by Summit were not caused by their fraudulent activity

and should not have been included in the U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1

calculation.



     C. Cost to Complete as a Measure of Loss

      It should be noted at the outset that we do not question

the district court's factual determination that Summit's cost to

complete the Green Hill project exceeded $1,500,000. The trial

judge heard extensive testimony on that issue and his factual

determination finds more than adequate support in the record.

What the record does not contain is any indication that this loss

was due to the fraud of the appellants rather than the obvious

failure of two general contractors, Susquehanna and ECU, to

fulfill their contractual obligations in a timely fashion.

     Culnen was a registered independent agent of Wausau with

actual and apparent authority to execute and deliver surety

bonds.   While there may have been fraud in the failure to advise

Wausau of the issuance, in the inflated invoice, in their

redelivery to Culnen, and in the effort to mislead possible

obligees concerning their validity, the fact remains that the



the version of § 2F1.1 contained in the November 1992 Guidelines
Manual would have resulted in the imposition of more severe
penalties. The district court and the probation officer
therefore properly applied the Guidelines in effect at the time
of the offense. See U.S.S.G. § 1B1.11(b).
bonds appear to have been validly issued and enforceable by any

proper obligee who relied on their issuance.14

     Under Pennsylvania law, a principal is liable for the acts

of its agent committed in the scope of its employment, even

though the principal did not authorize the act.   Aiello v. Ed

Saxe Real Estate, Inc., 
508 Pa. 553
, 
499 A.2d 282
(1982); see

also Pennsylvania Nat'l Mut. Casualty Ins. Co. v. Insurance

Comm'r of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, 121 Pa.Cmwlth. 618,

551 A.2d 368
(Pa. Commw. Ct. 1988).   Thus, to the extent that

Summit (or any other claimant) has any rights under the bonds,

either initially or pursuant to later agreements, those rights

would continue to exist.

     Although Summit was the project lender, it was not a named

obligee under either the performance or payment bonds as they

were initially issued.   Green Hill was the obligee on the

performance bond, while the payment bond named as obligees only

those
     having a direct contract with [ECU] or with a
     subcontractor of [ECU] for labor, material or both,
     used or reasonably required for use in the performance

     14
        In a recent decision from the Middle District of
Pennsylvania, York Excavating Co., Inc. v. Employers Insurance of
Wausau, No. CV-91-1037 (M.D. Pa. Oct. 21, 1993)(Memorandum
Opinion of Hon. James F. McClure, Jr., U.S.D.J.), the court
denied claims brought by one of the project subcontractors
against the Wausau bonds for work done pursuant to written and
oral agreements entered into in 1987. However, the decision was
not premised on the validity of the bonds, but rather on the
validity of York's claims. The court found insufficient evidence
of an oral agreement with ECU. Furthermore, the court found that
since ECU was not a party to the written contracts by which York
agreed to perform work, York could not collect under the Wausau
bonds.
     of the Contract, labor and material being construed to
     include that part of water, gas, power, light, heat,
     oil gasoline, telephone service or rental of equipment
     directly applicable to the Contract.


York Excavating, slip. op. at 13.

     There is also indication in the record that Summit was aware

that it was not an obligee when it agreed to accept ECU as the

new general contractor.   Daddona App. at 259. Of course, a lender

benefits indirectly by the existence of a performance or payment

bond in favor of the owner and subcontractors. However, because

of the Cohen family indemnity, it is clear that Green Hill,

controlled by Cohen, would have been reluctant to exercise its

rights under the bonds. However, the indictment in this case does

not charge the existence of this indemnity as an act of fraud,

nor did Summit insist in April of 1988, when negotiating the

foreclosure settlement, that Green Hill exercise its rights under

the bonds. The record is clear that Summit feared a protracted

foreclosure battle and wanted a quick settlement to take control

of the project.

     It is equally clear that Green Hill's assignment and escrow

of the bonds was limited to guaranteeing that existing debts to

subcontractors were paid by Green Hill.15 There is nothing in the

     15
         The Escrow Agreement specifically provides in the first
                                        paragraph that the bonds
                                        shall be held
     for the benefit of [Summit] until such time as there
     are no mechanics liens filed against the Project
     resulting from events that occurred prior to the date
     hereof . . . provided, however, that in the event no
     Mechanics Liens have been filed against the Project by
     August 10, 1988, then this Escrow Agreement shall
     automatically terminate.
record to suggest that Summit ever had to pay debts to

subcontractors that were outstanding at the time it took over the

property. When Wausau denied Summit's bond claim on October 7,

1988, there is no indication that Summit thereafter took any

legal action against Wausau, notwithstanding the significant

amount at issue.

     It does not appear from the record before us that Summit was

harmed in any way by the issuance of the bonds.    Nor can we say

that Summit was harmed by the efforts of Cohen, Daddona, and

Culnen at various times to deny the existence of the bonds.     As

previously noted Summit has no direct rights under the bonds as a

named obligee, and its rights as assignee of Green Hill in the

settlement of April, 1988, were not only sharply limited, but

also unnecessary since the condition of the escrow was satisfied.

     A recent decision from the Seventh Circuit offers insight

into the issue of measuring damages for sentencing purposes in a

fraud case.   The appellant in United States v. Marlatt, 
24 F.3d 1005
(7th Cir. 1994), owned a title company which sold title

insurance underwritten by Ticor Title Insurance Company

("Ticor").    Marlatt purchased a resort hotel and converted it

into time-shared condominium units.   With each unit sold, he

issued a title insurance policy underwritten by Ticor.    However,

while the policies represented clear title to the units, the

titles were in fact heavily encumbered.    When Ticor discovered

this, it spent $476,000 to clear the titles.    Later, in response

Cohen App. at 330a.
to the threat of lawsuits from the purchasers of the

condominiums, Ticor spent an additional $565,000 to repurchase

all of the units sold.

     Marlatt pled guilty to one count of mail fraud and one count

of making false statements to the Department of Labor.   In

determining the amount of loss pursuant to U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1(b),

the district court included both the money spent clearing the

title and the money spent repurchasing the units, presumably

concluding that both were elements of the loss caused by the

fraud.   The Seventh Circuit vacated the sentence, even though it

conceded that the expense of repurchasing the units might be

considered as having been caused by the appellant's fraud, in the

sense of "but for" causation:

          Even if it had been, it was not chargeable to the
     defendant under section 2F1.1 of the guidelines.
     Application Note 7(b) distinguishes between loss on the
     one hand and consequential and incidental damages on
     the other and makes it clear that with irrelevant
     exceptions the latter two items are not to be counted
     in computing the loss for purposes of sentencing under
     this guideline. The reason for that distinction is no
     doubt to prevent the sentencing hearing from turning
     into a tort or contract suit. The distinction is
     nicely illustrated by this case. The defendant
     extracted from Ticor by fraud a bunch of insurance
     policies on which Ticor was required to make good to
     the tune of $476,000. In the wake of the loss Ticor
     incurred other expenses, which were consequences,
     perhaps even foreseeable consequences, of the fraud,
     but were not the thing actually taken from Ticor. . . .


Id. at 1007-08
(citations omitted).

     Other circuits have likewise drawn a distinction between

losses that were directly caused by the fraud and "consequential
and incidental damages."   See, e.g., United States v. Newman, 
6 F.3d 623
, 630 (9th Cir. 1993)("[The measure of loss] does not

include consequential losses.   If the Sentencing Commission had

intended to include consequential losses, it would have included

them in the definition of loss."); United States v. Wilson, 
993 F.2d 214
, 217 (11th Cir. 1993)("The phrase 'property taken,

damaged or destroyed' does not allow for inclusion of incidental

or consequential injury, and it is error to rely on evidence of

such injury in calculating loss when the value of the property

may be ascertained."), citing United States v. Thomas, 
973 F.2d 1152
, 1159 & n.9 (5th Cir. 1992); cf. United States v. Stanley,

12 F.3d 17
, 20-21 (2d Cir. 1993).

     While it may be that Summit's excess cost to complete the

project is in some sense a consequence, at least in part, of its

involvement with Cohen and Daddona, this loss is "not the thing

actually taken" from Summit as a result of their fraudulent

activities.

     We do not mean to suggest that no financial losses were

incurred by the fraudulent activities of the appellants.   Wausau

has suffered actual harm in the form of legal expenses, and

potential harm in the form of possible claims against the bond.

Some of the subcontractors and materialmen who were covered by

the payment bond may also have suffered losses, although only a

few claims have surfaced and one of the largest has been recently

rejected by the Middle District of Pennsylvania.

     Whatever losses Summit or others may have suffered from

appellant's fraud, Summit has not demonstrated any losses which
can fairly be measured by its cost to complete the project, and

it was therefore error for the district court to incorporate

Tandy's calculations into the U.S.S.G. § 2F1.1 determination of

the loss caused by the fraud. The sentences will be vacated, and

the matter remanded to the district court for resentencing.

Source:  CourtListener

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