Carlos Villalba v. Coutts & Co. (USA) Int'l. ( 2001 )


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  •                    Maria Del Carmen MIRANDA DE VILLALBA, Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    COUTTS & CO. (USA) INTERNATIONAL, Defendant-Appellee.
    No. 00-11949.
    United States Court of Appeals,
    Eleventh Circuit.
    May 11, 2001.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida.(No. 96-01971-CV-ASG),
    Alan Stephen Gold, Judge.
    Before EDMONDSON, FAY and NEWMAN*, Circuit Judges.
    NEWMAN, Circuit Judge:
    This appeal concerns the scope of the provision of the Right to Financial Privacy Act of 1978
    ("RFPA") that insulates a financial institution from liability for certain disclosures to a government authority
    concerning possible law violations. See 12 U.S.C. § 3403(c). Maria Villalba appeals from a judgment of the
    District Court for the Southern District of Florida (Alan S. Gold, District Judge), dismissing, on motion for
    summary judgment, her suit under the RFPA against Defendant-Appellee Coutts & Co. USA. We conclude
    that the disclosure was permissible under the RFPA and therefore affirm.
    Background
    Plaintiff-Appellant Maria Villalba resides in Colombia and is a citizen of both Colombia and Spain.
    She maintains an account with Defendant-Appellee Coutts & Co. USA ("Coutts"), a Florida corporation.
    Coutts is a subsidiary of National Westminster Bank PLC, and is an "Edge Act Corporation," authorized to
    engage in foreign banking.1
    In May 1996, the United States filed an in rem complaint against $200,000 in accounts at Coutts and
    other financial institutions. The accounts at Coutts were controlled by Villalba and her relatives. The
    Government's complaint alleged that the funds in the accounts were obtained from money laundering. The
    District Court for the Southern District of New York (David G. Trager, District Judge) immediately issued
    *
    Honorable Jon O. Newman, U.S. Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit, sitting by designation.
    1
    An "Edge Act corporation" is a corporation formed for the purpose of "engaging in international or
    foreign banking or other international or foreign financial operations ... either directly or through the
    agency, ownership or control of local institutions in foreign countries." 12 U.S.C. § 611.
    a civil arrest warrant for the funds, and the warrant was faxed to Coutts. The warrant ordered Coutts to
    "arrest, attach and seize the Property until further order of the Court."
    A day or two after these warrants were executed, according to a deposition of the Assistant U.S.
    Attorney ("AUSA") handling the forfeiture action, "someone" at Coutts told the AUSA that Villalba had
    unsuccessfully attempted to wire transfer money out of her account at Coutts; the AUSA "believe[d] the
    number given was $500,000." Coutts denies that this disclosure ever occurred. Moreover, according to
    Coutts, the only known attempted transfer of seized funds occurred three days after Coutts received the
    warrant, when Villalba sought to transfer $75,000. In July 1996, Villalba and several of her relatives filed
    this civil action in the Southern District of Florida, alleging that Coutts's disclosure of the alleged $500,000
    withdrawal attempt violated the RFPA, and other laws. The RFPA prohibits bank employees from disclosing
    customers' financial information to the governmental authorities without customer authorization, subject to
    various exceptions. After dismissal of the original complaint and reinstatement following a prior appeal to
    this Court, see Villalba v. Coutts & Co. (USA), 
    156 F.3d 185
    (11th Cir.1998) (table), the complaint has been
    narrowed to include only a claim by Villalba against Coutts under the RFPA.
    Coutts sought summary judgment on the ground that, even if the alleged disclosure of an attempted
    $500,000 wire transfer had occurred, it is protected from liability by 12 U.S.C. § 3403(c), which provides:
    Nothing in this chapter shall preclude any financial institution, or any officer, employee or agent of
    a financial institution, from notifying a Government authority that such institution, or officer,
    employee, or agent has information which may be relevant to a possible violation of any statute or
    regulation. Such information may include only the name or other identifying information concerning
    any individual, corporation, or account involved in and the nature of any suspected illegal activity....
    Any financial institution, or officer, employee, or agent thereof, making a disclosure of information
    pursuant to this subsection, shall not be liable to the customer under any [federal or state law].
    The District Court agreed and granted summary judgment in favor of Coutts.
    Discussion
    Villalba contends initially that the District Court erred in permitting the section 3403(c) defense to
    be asserted for the first time on motion for summary judgment. We disagree. A court may consider an
    affirmative defense that did not appear in the answer, if the plaintiff has suffered no prejudice from the failure
    to raise the defense in a timely fashion. See Hassan v. United States Postal Service, 
    842 F.2d 260
    , 263 (11th
    Cir.1988). Coutts's answer included as an affirmative defense the safe harbor provision of the Annunzio-
    Wylie Anti-Money Laundering Act, 31 U.S.C. § 5318(g)(3). This provision insulates a financial institution
    from liability for disclosures "of any possible violation of law or regulation or a disclosure pursuant to this
    subsection or any other authority." 
    Id. Whether or
    not this provision covers a disclosure pursuant to section
    3403(c) (the District Court thought it did not), the two provisions are sufficiently similar that the late assertion
    of section 3403(c) could not realistically cause prejudice to a plaintiff who was timely alerted to a section
    5318(g)(3) defense.
    The initial question on the merits of the section 3403(c) defense is whether there was a factual
    dispute that Coutts "suspected illegal activity." 31 U.S.C. § 3403(c). Villalba contends that since Coutts
    denied that the disclosure was made, by its "own admission, it never had such a 'suspicion.' " Brief for
    Appellant at 13. However, a business entity like Coutts is entitled to contend in the alternative that it is
    unaware of any disclosure made by its employees, but that if the alleged disclosure was made, the employee
    making it indisputably had a basis for reasonable suspicion of illegal activity.2 That basis exists here where
    a depositor attempts to wire a large amount of funds out of an account that has been frozen by court order
    because of suspected money-laundering.
    The requisite suspicion is not precluded, as Villalba contends, by the fact that Coutts did not file a
    Suspicious Activity Report ("SAR"), as required by 31 C.F.R. § 103.18(b)(3) (2001). A bank is obliged
    "immediately [to] notify, by telephone, an appropriate law enforcement authority in addition to filing timely
    a SAR." 
    Id. If the
    wire transfer attempt was disclosed (which must be assumed for purposes of the summary
    judgment motion), no reasonable jury could fail to find, on the undisputed circumstances, that the person
    making the immediate disclosure had a reasonable suspicion of illegal activity, leaving the failure
    subsequently to file an SAR without sufficient probative force to preclude such a finding. Whether the failure
    to file the SAR was due to neglect or a mistaken belief that it was not required because the Government was
    already initiating action is irrelevant to the justification for the alleged disclosure.
    The further issue on the merits is whether the extent of the alleged disclosure exceeded the scope of
    the information section 3403(c) permits to be revealed. Even if we assume, as Villalba contends, that
    disclosure is limited to the name of the individual and "the nature of any suspected illegal activity," 12 U.S.C.
    § 3403(c) (emphasis added), we agree with the District Court that the alleged mention of the $500,000 amount
    of the requested wire transfer did not go beyond the "nature" of the suspected activity. What made the request
    2
    Villalba contends that the insulation of section 3403(c) is available only where the disclosure is made
    on the basis of a subjective suspicion of illegal activity; Coutts counters that only objectively reasonable
    suspicion is required. We need not resolve that dispute because, for purposes of this appeal, we will
    assume that subjective suspicion is required.
    indisputably suspicious was its size, and we would be trifling with the statute if we construed it to permit
    disclosure of request to transfer "a very large amount," but not "a $500,000 amount." See Bailey v. USDA,
    
    59 F.3d 141
    , 143 (10th Cir.1995) (disclosure of withdrawal and deposit records can qualify as information
    about "nature of the suspected illegal activity," where these amounts are necessary to show grounds for the
    bank's suspicion). The congressional concern for privacy was sufficiently observed by not revealing any
    details of the purported recipient of the funds requested to be wired.
    Conclusion
    The judgment of the District Court is AFFIRMED.