PALLMEYER, District Judge.
Plaintiffs-appellants Christopher White and his company Reffco II, L.P. (collectively, "White")
At all relevant times, White was the sole shareholder and president of Reffco II, LLP. White was also a principal of HPT, LLC ("HPT"), a Nevada limited liability company, and a general partner and president of Premier Properties USA, Inc. ("Premier"), an Indiana corporation. White maintained accounts for all three companies at NBI, a member bank of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ("FDIC"). Premier's NBI account had the sole purpose of paying the company's employee payroll; all of Premier's other expenses were paid from Reffco's account at NBI.
In addition to the accounts at NBI, White maintained a checking account for HPT at J.P. Morgan Chase Bank ("Chase Bank"). On January 30, 2008, White signed a check from HPT's account at Chase Bank payable to Premier in the amount of $500,000. Later that day, Premier endorsed the check to Reffco, and White deposited the check into Reffco's account at NBI. NBI credited Reffco's account for this amount.
That same morning, ADP, the payroll provider for Premier, presented NBI with three automated clearinghouse ("ACH") drafts—essentially, checks—totaling $182,897.59, against Premier's payroll account. ADP also sent a "reverse wire demand" to NBI, directing that NBI wire-transfer an additional $237,476.23 from Premier's payroll account. At the time that ADP requested this money, Premier's payroll account had a balance of just $259.39, far less than necessary to cover the ACH drafts or reverse wire demand. NBI employee Loaren Muehl accordingly transferred $425,000 to Premier's payroll account from the Reffco account, which held more than $500,000 as a result of the HPT check deposited earlier that day. NBI then paid $420,373.82 to ADP by withdrawing money from the Premier account.
The HPT check for $500,000 was subsequently returned due to insufficient funds in HPT's account at Chase Bank. Because NBI had already honored the HPT check and used it to pay ADP, the bounced check resulted in an overdraft of Premier's payroll account in excess of $382,000.
There is a bit more to the story than what appears in White's complaint.
Around the same time that the state court entered its judgment, the state fileda criminal action against White, charging White with one count of fraud on a financial institution, one count of check fraud, and one count of theft. See White v. State, No. 49A04-1203-PC-102, 2012 WL 6709644, at *4 (Ind.App.Ct. Dec. 26, 2012). On August 18, 2009, a jury convicted White of all three counts. At sentencing, the court "merged"
White appealed his criminal conviction, asserting that: (1) there was insufficient evidence to support his conviction for fraud on a financial institution, and (2) he received ineffective assistance of counsel. Id. at *1. The Indiana Court of Appeals rejected those arguments, observing:
Id. at *4-5.
Shortly after entry of the state court civil judgment against White on June 25, 2008, White filed for bankruptcy protection. NBI initiated an adversary proceeding in bankruptcy court, seeking a declaration that the state court civil judgment constituted a "nondischargeable obligation" under §§ 523(a)(2)(A) and 523(a)(6) of the Bankruptcy Code. White, 444 B.R. at 890. The bankruptcy court granted summary judgment in favor of NBI, holding that White was estopped from re-litigating whether he committed fraud against NBI, and on November 9, 2011, entered judgment in favor of NBI and against White in the amount of $378,486.17.
According to White, these false reports were then provided to the state prosecutor, who, after receiving them, "prosecuted White for check fraud and other crimes," including "a check kiting scheme." As a consequence of NBI's false reports, White alleges, he "sustained damages in an as yet undetermined amount."
The NBI Employees moved to dismiss White's complaint, arguing that White failed to allege any facts that: (1) he detrimentally relied on NBI's allegedly false reports, or (2) the allegedly false reports proximately caused White's damages. The district court found that White did adequately allege proximate causation, but agreed with defendants that White failed to plead detrimental reliance. The court then granted the motion to dismiss, relying on Brown Leasing Co. v. Cosmopolitan Bancorp, Inc., 42 F.3d 1112, 1116 (7th Cir.1994), where we held that a plaintiff must show detrimental reliance in order to establish a violation of the Federal Reserve Act, 12 U.S.C. § 503, and the False Entry Statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1005. White v. Keely, No. 1:14-cv-00471, 2014 WL 5822862, at *2-3 (S.D.Ind. Nov. 7, 2014). White appeals the district court's decision, asserting that Brown Leasing was wrongly decided and should be overruled.
This court reviews a district court's Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal de novo. Charleston v. Bd. of Trustees of Univ. of Ill. at Chicago, 741 F.3d 769, 772 (7th Cir.2013). In doing so, we ordinarily accept all well-pleaded factual allegations in
Section 1005 of the False Entry Statute makes it illegal for bank officers and directors to make false reports with the intent to deceive the bank or its regulators. 18 U.S.C. § 1005. Section 503 of the Federal Reserve Act, meanwhile, creates a private cause of action for any person who has "sustained [damages] in consequence" of a violation of Section 1005. 12 U.S.C. § 503. White takes issue with our holding, in Brown Leasing, that in order for a private plaintiff to have "sustained [damages] in consequence" of a § 1005 violation, he or she must have detrimentally relied on the false reports in question. 42 F.3d at 1116. We need not address this challenge to Brown Leasing, however. White concedes that he must allege harm resulting from NBI's false statements, and we conclude that he cannot do so.
The complaint does allege that White and Reffco have sustained damages as a consequence of false reports, but that is a legal conclusion about proximate cause, and thus insufficient to state a claim. See McReynolds v. Merrill Lynch & Co., 694 F.3d 873, 885 (7th Cir.2012). The district court construed White's complaint as alleging that NBI's false bank reports caused White "to be prosecuted for a check-kiting scheme and resulted in the withdrawal of money from one account to another without his authorization or knowledge." White, 2014 WL 5822862, at *2. White does not allege, however, that the transfer of money from his accounts without his authorization was caused by the NBI Employees' false bank reports. Indeed, White could not make this allegation because the allegedly false bank reports were not created until after the money transfers took place. To the extent White alleges that these transfers caused him harm, this is irrelevant to White's § 503/1005 claim; even if the allegedly unauthorized transfers violated the law (as White claims they did), they did not violate § 1005.
There is even less merit in White's assertion that the NBI Employees' violation of § 1005 caused him to be prosecuted for check fraud. Rather, as the complaint suggests, and other documents in the record reveal, White was prosecuted for check fraud and for engaging in a check-kiting scheme because he wrote a $500,000 check from a bank account that he knew had insufficient funds, resulting in an overdraft of his accounts at NBI. Any allegation that bank officers' false statements caused him to be prosecuted is not facially plausible. The prosecutor charged White with depositing a bad check and then refusing to pay the resulting overdraft. Such a charge did not rest on NBI's allegedly false statements that White authorized the transfer of the money to ADP. Indeed, at oral argument, White conceded that the allegedly false reports did not prompt his prosecution for check fraud; he was subject to prosecution for knowingly presenting the bad check to NBI.
Though he did not specifically so allege, White appears to suggest that NBI's false reports caused him harm because they "ultimately led to [his] criminal
In short, White cannot establish that he suffered harm as a result of the alleged false statements of bank officers. Evidently recognizing the futility of his theory that he can claim those statements were the cause of his prosecution, White belatedly suggested another theory of harm. At oral argument, he asserted for the first time that the bank's false reports have prevented him from being able to continue his business as a real estate developer. "But arguments made for the first time at oral argument are waived," Szczesny v. Ashcroft, 358 F.3d 464, 465 (7th Cir.2004), and because White made no mention of this harm in his complaint, we need not consider it in determining whether White adequately pleaded proximate cause. Nor do we find it facially plausible that NBI's false reports are responsible for stifling the employment opportunities of a person found guilty of fraud on a financial institution. We also note that, during oral argument, White was unable to provide the court with any information regarding the employment opportunities purportedly lost as a consequence of NBI's false reports. White suggested that this information could be obtained through discovery, but in light of the fact that the allegedly false reports were created several years ago, we are confident that White already has information about the alleged results of the NBI Employees' conduct.
Rule 38 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure allows us to "award just damages or single or double costs" upon determination that an appeal is frivolous. An appeal is frivolous "when the result is obvious or when the appellant's argument is wholly without merit." McCoy v. Iberdrola Renewables, Inc., 769 F.3d 535, 536-37 (7th Cir.2014). Sanctions are also warranted under Rule 38 "when a litigant or attorney presents appellate arguments with no reasonable expectations of success for the purposes of delay, harassment, or sheer obstinacy." In re Nora, 778 F.3d 662, 665 (7th Cir.2015).
Based on our review of the complaint and the legal history of this case, which has embroiled NBI in costly litigation with White for seven years, we find that White's appeal is frivolous and sanctionable under Rule 38. As explained above, White has utterly failed to allege that the NBI Employees' violation of § 1005 caused him to suffer harm. Even when pressed by this court, White could not put forward any cognizable theory of proximate cause, other than a potential loss of employment opportunities—a claim never mentioned before oral argument and for which White could offer no factual support. Although White asserts that he is not making an improper collateral attack on his criminal conviction, this appears to be precisely what White attempts to do with this lawsuit, in order to absolve himself of his misconduct and place the blame
AFFIRMED; SANCTIONS ORDERED.