Liliya Krasilnikova v. United States ( 2022 )


Menu:
  •                                In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    ____________________
    No. 21-2725
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff-Appellee,
    v.
    STEVEN MILLER,
    Defendant,
    APPEAL OF: LILIYA KRASILNIKOVA,
    Appellant.
    ____________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:17-cr-00442-2 — Elaine E. Bucklo, Judge.
    ____________________
    ARGUED APRIL 8, 2022 — DECIDED JULY 12, 2022
    ____________________
    Before WOOD, HAMILTON, and JACKSON-AKIWUMI, Circuit
    Judges.
    HAMILTON, Circuit Judge. This appeal presents an unusu-
    ally tangled story about ownership of a family residence. The
    district court sorted out the mess as well as the record would
    allow. We affirm its decision finding that defendant Steven
    2                                                   No. 21-2725
    Miller had a one-half ownership interest in the property and
    that it should be used to pay restitution for Miller’s crime.
    Miller and appellant Liliya Krasilnikova are married. In
    2018, Miller pled guilty to one count of wire fraud. Part of his
    sentence included an order to pay approximately $1.1 million
    in restitution. Days after Miller received his sentence,
    Krasilnikova agreed to sell their family home to a third party.
    The United States then gave notice of a lien on the property,
    asserting that Miller had a one-half interest in the proceeds
    and that his share should be used to pay restitution.
    Krasilnikova argues that the government is entitled to
    nothing. She contends that she was the sole owner and that
    Miller had no interest in the property or the sale proceeds.
    The title to the property was indeed only in Krasilnikova’s
    name, and title is ordinarily king in determining ownership
    interests in property. As Judge Bucklo explained in careful de-
    tail, however, the evidence here shows that the property was
    the subject of not one but several highly irregular, indeed
    fraudulent, transactions preceding Miller’s conviction and the
    eventual sale of the home. The fraudulent transactions in-
    cluded the very transfer of title that Krasilnikova relies upon
    to assert that she was the sole owner. Since the paper title is
    not reliable, the district court properly considered the addi-
    tional evidence, and the court did not err by dividing the pro-
    ceeds equally between Miller and Krasilnikova based on their
    shared exercise of control over their family home.
    I. Factual and Procedural Background
    This appeal comes to us in the form of a civil garnishment
    order inside a criminal prosecution. See United States v.
    Kollintzas, 
    501 F.3d 796
    , 800 (7th Cir. 2007) (“[D]istrict courts
    No. 21-2725                                                     3
    may entertain civil garnishment and other collection proceed-
    ings as postjudgment remedies within an underlying criminal
    case….”).
    After Miller pled guilty to one count of wire fraud, he was
    sentenced to a year and a day in prison and two years of su-
    pervised release. He was also ordered to pay approximately
    $1.1 million in restitution to two financial institutions and a
    government agency. Upon entry of judgment, the order for
    payment of restitution became a lien in favor of the govern-
    ment on all of Miller’s property and rights to property. See 
    18 U.S.C. § 3613
    (c); Kollintzas, 
    501 F.3d at 802
    . Such a lien is per-
    fected against purchasers and other third parties when the
    government files a notice of the lien with an appropriate pub-
    lic office, such as the county clerk or recorder. See § 3613(d);
    
    26 U.S.C. § 6323
    (f). Important to note: “Liens to pay restitu-
    tion debts are treated like tax liens … [and] are ‘effective
    against every interest in property accorded a taxpayer by state
    law.’” Kollintzas, 
    501 F.3d at 802
     (internal citations omitted),
    quoting United States v. Denlinger, 
    982 F.2d 233
    , 235 (7th Cir.
    1992).
    The government then tried to collect Miller’s assets to use
    them for restitution. Days after her husband was sentenced,
    Krasilnikova entered into a contract to sell their family home
    (“the Crescent Avenue property”) for $855,000. Shortly after
    that, the United States filed a lien on the property to enforce
    the restitution judgment and collect what it said was Miller’s
    portion of the proceeds. Krasilnikova disputed that claim. She
    asserted that Miller—and thus the government in his stead—
    was not entitled to any of the proceeds because title to the
    Crescent Avenue property was only in her name. With the sale
    pending, the parties struck a bargain: the government would
    4                                                               No. 21-2725
    lift the lien on the property to allow the sale to go forward,
    but the sale proceeds would sit in escrow while the parties
    resolved the dispute.
    Next, Krasilnikova filed a motion in the district court in
    Miller’s criminal case. She sought an order to release the es-
    crowed funds to her. The government objected and asserted
    it was entitled to one-half of the sale proceeds. To resolve the
    dispute, the district court applied the framework of the Fed-
    eral Debt Collection Procedures Act (FDCPA), 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 3001
    –3308. The FDCPA governs collection of, among oth-
    ers, debts for securing restitution in federal criminal cases.
    United States v. Sheth, 
    759 F.3d 711
    , 716 (7th Cir. 2014). When
    the government asserts a lien on property of a criminal de-
    fendant, a person with a competing interest in the property is
    entitled to participate in the court collection proceedings.
    Kollintzas, 
    501 F.3d at 801, 803
    . The so-called “interested per-
    son” then has the burden of establishing her ownership inter-
    est in the disputed property. 
    Id. at 803
    . 1
    1  Krasilnikova notes that the government failed to file a writ of gar-
    nishment or to serve her with a notice of garnishment proceedings under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 3202
    (b). The procedural errors did not matter here. As the dis-
    trict court found, Krasilnikova had actual notice of the government’s claim
    to the Crescent Avenue property, and she participated in the proceedings
    with an attorney and provided documents and testimony to support her
    claim. United States v. Miller, 
    558 F. Supp. 3d 655
    , 659 (N.D. Ill. 2021). While
    we remind the government to follow the necessary procedures under the
    FDCPA, the procedural errors here did not cause Krasilnikova any preju-
    dice. E.g., United States v. Meux, 
    597 F.3d 835
    , 838 (7th Cir. 2010) (no prej-
    udice to defendant after government filed a motion for turnover instead
    of a motion for garnishment; defendant had “essentially the same due pro-
    cess protections” that he would have had in garnishment proceedings, in-
    cluding notice, representation, and a hearing).
    No. 21-2725                                                      5
    As an “interested person,” Krasilnikova asserted a com-
    peting right to the Crescent Avenue property over which the
    government had asserted an apparently valid lien. To resolve
    ownership disputes under the FDCPA, courts “look initially
    to state law to determine what rights the [criminal defendant]
    has in the property the Government seeks to reach,” and then
    turn to “federal law to determine whether the [defendant’s]
    state-delineated rights qualify as ‘property’ or ‘rights to prop-
    erty’ within the compass of the federal tax lien legislation.”
    Kollintzas, 
    501 F.3d at 802
    , quoting Drye v. United States, 
    528 U.S. 49
    , 58 (1999). The latter is not in dispute, so the state law
    issue is decisive.
    After holding an evidentiary hearing, the district court
    concluded that the government was entitled to one-half of the
    proceeds from the Crescent Avenue property sale. The court
    first determined that under Illinois law, courts evaluating
    ownership can look past title and instead ask who actually
    exercised control over the property at issue. United States v.
    Miller, 
    558 F. Supp. 3d 655
    , 661–62 (N.D. Ill. 2021), citing People
    v. Chicago Title & Trust Co., 
    389 N.E.2d 540
    , 544–45 (Ill. 1979).
    Krasilnikova’s sole title was not decisive but rather a factor to
    be considered. The district court gave little weight to the title
    because it reflected “a number of serious irregularities.” 
    Id. at 663
    .
    The court ultimately found that Miller and Krasilnikova
    exercised shared control over the property so that each was
    entitled to half of the proceeds. To reach an even split, the
    court took guidance from Illinois divorce law. Illinois courts
    split marital property “in just proportions.” 
    Id.,
     quoting 750
    ILCS 5/503(d). The court concluded that a fifty-fifty split sat-
    isfied that standard here, and at least that Krasilnikova did
    6                                                          No. 21-2725
    not prove she was entitled to more, as was her burden under
    the FDCPA. The court therefore awarded the government
    Miller’s half of the sale proceeds. Krasilnikova has appealed.
    II. Analysis
    We review the district court’s factual findings for clear er-
    ror and conclusions of law de novo. United States v. Henricks,
    
    886 F.3d 618
    , 623 (7th Cir. 2018). Krasilnikova’s central argu-
    ment on appeal is that the district court misapplied state law
    by finding that Miller had an interest in the Crescent Avenue
    property despite her sole title. We disagree.
    A series of property transfers and mortgages casts signifi-
    cant doubt on the legitimacy of Krasilnikova’s paper title.
    Ample evidence suggests that Miller and Krasilnikova ma-
    nipulated property and financial records to conceal the true
    ownership of the Crescent Avenue property. In such circum-
    stances, Illinois law authorizes courts to evaluate ownership
    in light of evidence of genuine control over the property. The
    evidence showed that Miller and Krasilnikova exercised
    equal control over the property and thus had equal property
    interests at the time of sale. At the very least, the district court
    did not clearly err in finding that they did. We turn now to
    evidence of the history of the Crescent Avenue property, and
    then apply Illinois law to this ownership dispute. 2
    2  Krasilnikova makes an additional argument related to the proper
    framework for resolving her appeal. She asserts that the parties’ escrow
    agreement, not the FDCPA, governs this dispute. It does not. The govern-
    ment’s potential interest in the Crescent Avenue property stems from Mil-
    ler’s restitution order, not the escrow agreement. While the escrow agree-
    ment offered a practical solution to a time-sensitive problem, the parties
    did not contract around the FDCPA, which “provides the exclusive civil
    procedures for the United States … to recover a judgment on a debt” in
    No. 21-2725                                                               7
    A. The Crescent Avenue Property
    In 2012, Krasilnikova purchased the Crescent Avenue
    property with a $250,000 gift she received from her parents.
    Miller handled the closing by himself at Krasilnikova’s direc-
    tion. At the time, Miller and Krasilnikova were engaged.
    Krasilnikova did not obtain title to the property immediately.
    Instead, county property records indicate that the title passed
    to a land trust. The beneficiaries of the trust were Krasilnikova
    and Ellen Malecki, a person who would play a big role in later
    transactions, and they were listed as joint tenants.
    In December 2012, Miller and Krasilnikova were married.
    They razed the old house on the Crescent Avenue property
    and built a new one. The improvements cost around $425,000.
    To help finance the building, SRK Ventures LLC issued a
    mortgage loan for $200,000 to the trust, with the loan to be
    paid off in four months. The loan agreement bore
    Krasilnikova’s and Ellen Malecki’s signatures, but Malecki
    testified that her signature was forged. Miller himself
    guaranteed the construction loan. A law firm disbursed the
    funds from the trust to the subcontractors with Krasilnikova’s
    and Ellen Malecki’s signatures, but Malecki testified that her
    signature was again forged. 3
    most cases. Sheth, 759 F.3d at 716 (omission in original), quoting 
    28 U.S.C. § 3001
    (a). And no other federal law, such as the Mandatory Victims Resti-
    tution Act, applies in this case. See § 3001(b) (other collection procedures
    may apply if “another Federal law specifies procedures for recovering on
    a claim or a judgment for a debt arising under such law”).
    3 The loan was not paid off within the four months, so SRK filed a lien
    on the property. Then in October 2013, a friend of Krasilnikova’s paid off
    the balance of the SRK loan, which at that time was $250,000. SRK then
    released the lien. Krasilnikova reimbursed the friend with part of the
    8                                                         No. 21-2725
    Miller and Krasilnikova moved into the Crescent Avenue
    property in 2013. The two would go on to live together and
    raise two children there until they sold the property in 2019,
    three months after Miller’s sentencing. During those years of
    the couple’s residence, however, the paper trail of titles,
    deeds, and mortgages was a byzantine tangle.
    In November 2013, Krasilnikova transferred to Ellen Mal-
    ecki and Malecki’s husband her interests in the land trust that
    held title to the Crescent Avenue property. Krasilnikova
    acknowledged that her action “took myself off the title.” Ellen
    Malecki testified that the only Malecki signature on the docu-
    ment approving the transfer was forged. A week later, the
    trust deeded the Crescent Avenue property to the Maleckis in
    their own names. Ellen Malecki testified that, once again, she
    and her husband did not know about the deed. The Maleckis’
    names would remain on the title of the Crescent Avenue prop-
    erty for the next two years, all while Miller and Krasilnikova
    lived in the home.
    Then came a series of additional mortgages and title trans-
    fers. First, in December 2013, a mortgage loan application was
    submitted to Carrington Mortgage Services, LLC in the names
    of the Maleckis. Miller witnessed and notarized the loan ap-
    plication. Carrington loaned the Maleckis $417,000. In what is
    becoming a familiar story, Ellen Malecki testified that she did
    not know about the Carrington mortgage, that her and her
    husband’s signatures were forged, and that she never re-
    ceived the proceeds.
    proceeds from a later mortgage. According to the evidence in the district
    court, these transactions involving Krasilnikova’s friend were not docu-
    mented.
    No. 21-2725                                                   9
    Krasilnikova admitted in her testimony that the Carring-
    ton loan was actually for her and Miller’s use. She also testi-
    fied that the Maleckis’ family history and financial infor-
    mation, instead of her own, were submitted to qualify for the
    mortgage. (We use the passive voice advisedly because
    Krasilnikova’s testimony about how this fraudulent transac-
    tion was accomplished was so vague. See Dkt. 188, at 20–25.)
    As the district court noted, Krasilnikova testified that she was
    under the impression, from Miller, that Ellen Malecki had
    agreed to “help me out” because Krasilnikova’s credit score
    was not high enough to obtain a loan in her name. Cf. 
    18 U.S.C. § 1344
     (criminal bank fraud). The district court also
    found, on a point important to the bottom-line finding of
    shared ownership, that Miller and Krasilnikova made
    monthly payments on the loan from a joint checking account,
    and that Miller and Krasilnikova paid property taxes from the
    same joint checking account until late 2015.
    Property records indicate that the Maleckis quit-claimed
    the property to Myers Building & Consulting in September
    2015. Once again, Ellen Malecki testified that her and her
    husband’s signatures were forged and that she did not know
    about the transaction. It was Miller who notarized their
    supposed signatures on the quit-claim deed. A week later,
    Myers Building & Consulting quit-claimed the title to
    Krasilnikova in her own name. Once again, Miller notarized
    the transaction. On this transaction, Krasilnikova testified, her
    own signature on the document was forged. Still, this is the
    deed that Krasilnikova relies on to claim sole ownership.
    In October 2015, two more mortgages were taken out on
    the Crescent Avenue property. The first was from First Gen-
    eration Capital LLC, which issued a loan for $310,000 secured
    10                                                  No. 21-2725
    by a mortgage on the property. The mortgage listed the Mal-
    eckis as the mortgagors and OV18 LLC, one of Miller’s com-
    panies, as the borrower. This time, Ellen Malecki testified, she
    and her husband had actually signed the document. But she
    added that she signed the document at Miller’s request with-
    out knowing what the document was for and that she did not
    receive any proceeds from the loan. As for Krasilnikova, she
    testified that she did not know about this mortgage or loan.
    Even though the loan was secured by a mortgage granted by
    the Maleckis, who were no longer even nominally on the title,
    the First Generation Capital loan was released on January 31,
    2016. The record does not reflect who, if anyone, paid off the
    loan.
    The second October 2015 mortgage came from FirstMerit
    Bank. It issued a loan to Krasilnikova for $500,000 secured by
    a mortgage on the Crescent Avenue property. Krasilnikova
    testified that she used the proceeds from the FirstMerit loan
    to pay off the earlier Carrington loan. Krasilnikova now as-
    serts on appeal that she made monthly payments on the First-
    Merit loan, but she provided no documentary evidence for
    support in the district court.
    Then in May 2019, days after Miller was sentenced for wire
    fraud, Krasilnikova entered into a contract to sell the Crescent
    Avenue property to a third party for $855,000. Some of the
    proceeds were then used to pay off the FirstMerit loan. Under
    the parties’ agreement, the net proceeds were placed in es-
    crow pending the court’s resolution of the dispute. The court
    later granted a joint request from the parties to release half of
    the net proceeds to Krasilnikova while it determined whether
    the government had an interest in the rest.
    No. 21-2725                                                     11
    B. The Legal Consequences for Ownership
    As noted above, we consult state law to determine the par-
    ties’ property rights for purposes of the FDCPA. Henricks, 886
    F.3d at 625. The parties agree that when Krasilnikova sold the
    Crescent Avenue property shortly after Miller’s sentencing,
    she conveyed a facially unencumbered title and that title was
    in only her name. That title generally reflects legal ownership
    is axiomatic. See, e.g., Denlinger, 982 F.2d at 235 (explaining
    that “the rule everywhere in America” is that record title is
    the “highest evidence of ownership” (internal citation omit-
    ted)).
    A good illustration of the point is First Federal Savings &
    Loan Ass’n of Chicago v. Pogue, 
    389 N.E.2d 652
     (Ill. App. 1979).
    In that case, a bank filed a judgment lien on the property of a
    land trust against the beneficiary of that trust. Under Illinois
    law, a “beneficial interest in an Illinois land trust is an interest
    in personal property and not a direct interest in the real estate
    res of the trust.” 
    Id. at 655
    . The court found that since the rec-
    ord title of the property was in the trustee’s name, the benefi-
    ciary did not have any “actual ownership or record title to
    property … upon which a lien could be impressed.” Id.; ac-
    cord, Wagemann Oil Co. v. Marathon Oil Co., 
    714 N.E.2d 107
    ,
    115 (Ill. App. 1999) (“To hold otherwise would be inconsistent
    with the body of law holding that an interest in a beneficial
    interest does not attach to the real estate.”). This general prin-
    ciple would point toward a conclusion that the government is
    not entitled to any of the sale proceeds because Miller’s name
    was not listed on the title.
    But the problem for Krasilnikova is that the larger record
    shows that her claim to sole title is completely unreliable. As
    the district court found, Miller and Krasilnikova engaged in a
    12                                                   No. 21-2725
    complex series of irregular and fraudulent transactions to
    conceal true ownership of the Crescent Avenue property. To
    rely on bare title here would ignore the actual circumstances
    of those transactions. As we read Illinois law, in a rare case
    like this one, where substantial evidence shows that the paper
    title cannot be trusted, Illinois courts will consider other fac-
    tors to determine true ownership of the property in dispute.
    We draw this understanding from cases in which Illinois
    courts have recognized certain exceptions to the general rule
    that title is king. For instance, in assessing real estate taxes,
    the Illinois Supreme Court held that beneficiaries of a land
    trust, though not in legal title, were the owners of the property
    and therefore were liable for the tax. Chicago Title, 389 N.E.2d
    at 544 (“Revenue collection is not concerned with the
    ‘refinements of title’; it is concerned with the realities of
    ownership.”). In Chicago Title, the court explained that its
    prior opinions “indicate[d] a clear policy of the tax statute to
    look beyond the mere holder of title for a determination of
    ownership.” Id. at 545. Courts do not ignore title in land
    taxation disputes. Rather: “While title may be a factor in
    determining ownership it is not decisive. Of far greater
    importance is control of the property and the right to its
    benefits.” Id. The idea that title does not always control
    ownership disputes extends beyond taxes to other areas in
    Illinois law as well. See, e.g., IMM Acceptance Corp. v. First
    National Bank & Trust Co. of Evanston, 
    499 N.E.2d 1012
    , 1015
    (Ill. App. 1986) (statute of frauds); Department of Conservation
    v. Franzen, 
    356 N.E.2d 1245
    , 1250–51 (Ill. App. 1976) (eminent
    domain proceedings).
    These cases indicate that in rare cases where substantial
    evidence casts paper title into doubt, Illinois courts are willing
    No. 21-2725                                                  13
    to look beyond paper title and to take practical approaches to
    resolving ownership questions. Cf. Chicago Title, 
    389 N.E.2d at 544
     (“where the primary issue involves ownership rather
    than title, reliance on bare legal title would be inappropriate”
    (internal citation omitted)). That practical approach is
    especially suited to cases like this one, where the paper title
    does not reliably reflect reality.
    A hypothetical example borrowing facts from this appeal
    illustrates the need for this flexibility in rare cases. Vary the
    facts here and assume Miller had been sentenced in 2014,
    when the title of the Crescent Avenue property was in the
    Maleckis’ names. At that time, Miller and Krasilnikova had
    built a new home on the property and were living there,
    paying property taxes, and making payments from their joint
    checking account on the Carrington mortgage that they had
    taken out in the names of the Maleckis. Suppose the
    government had then asserted a lien on the Crescent Avenue
    property to secure restitution. A court would not have held
    the lien invalid, letting Miller off the hook, just because the
    Maleckis’ names—not his—were on the title, especially
    without the Maleckis’ knowledge. We would not conclude
    that Miller had no ownership interest when he lived in and
    helped improve the property, made payments for mortgages
    and property taxes, and orchestrated irregular and fraudulent
    transactions so that property records would not show his
    ownership interest. In that rare situation, Illinois law would
    permit courts to look beyond title. The same is true here.
    We are not saying that a married couple cannot choose to
    arrange their affairs so that they maintain separate ownership
    of properties, including a family residence. The problem here
    is that the paper title in only Krasilnikova’s name is
    14                                                 No. 21-2725
    unreliable, as it stems from the series of fraudulent transac-
    tions and forged signatures described above.
    Accordingly, the district court did not err in consulting
    other facts indicating actual control and deciding to split the
    proceeds equally between Miller and Krasilnikova. Neither
    spouse exercised more control than the other. The property
    was the family home for both. While Krasilnikova took out
    some of the mortgage loans in her name, Miller facilitated the
    closing and/or personally guaranteed some of those transac-
    tions, sometimes even entering into mortgages and transac-
    tions in Krasilnikova’s name, supposedly without her
    knowledge. Payments for at least one of those mortgages, as
    well as property taxes, came from a joint checking account
    where they both deposited their paychecks.
    The district court considered these facts and found that
    neither spouse exercised more control than the other. That
    finding was not clearly erroneous, and the court reasonably
    concluded that Miller and Krasilnikova each had a one-half
    ownership interest in the sale proceeds. The government is
    therefore entitled to Miller’s one-half interest of the Crescent
    Avenue property sale proceeds under the restitution order.
    The judgment of the district court is
    AFFIRMED.