Court Opinion

ID: 51549
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2010-04-26 01:06:36+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:54:41.529465
License: Public Domain

REVISED September 5, 2007      United States Court of Appeals
                                                               Fifth Circuit
                  IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                                            F I L E D
                            FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT            June 15, 2007
                            _____________________
                                                        Charles R. Fulbruge III
                                 No. 06-30641                   Clerk
                            _____________________

STATE OF LOUISIANA,

                                                    Plaintiff-Appellant,

versus

ROBERT GUIDRY,

                                                    Defendant-Appellee.

                       ----------------------
           Appeal from the United States District Court
               for the Eastern District of Louisiana
                       ----------------------

Before KING, WIENER, and OWEN, Circuit Judges.

WIENER, Circuit Judge:

     Plaintiff-Appellant State of Louisiana (the “State”) sued

Defendant-Appellee Robert Guidry in Louisiana state court, alleging

(1) tortious acquisition of a riverboat license, (2) conspiracy to

breach a fiduciary duty, and (3) breach of fiduciary duty.                 All

those    claims     arose     from   Guidry’s   participation        in      an

extortion/bribery scheme involving former Louisiana Governor Edwin

Edwards.   After the state court denied Guidry’s motion to dismiss

the State’s action, he filed a third-party complaint against the

United States, seeking to enforce the terms of a cooperation
agreement that he had entered into with federal prosecutors which

purported to limit Guidry’s total financial obligation for his

criminal wrongdoing.       The United States removed the case to the

district court, and Guidry again filed a motion to dismiss, which

was converted to a motion for summary judgment. The district court

granted    Guidry’s   summary    judgment      motion,   and   the   State    now

appeals.    We affirm.

                          I.    FACTS & PROCEEDINGS

A.     The Extortion Scheme

       Having been awarded a Certificate of Preliminary Approval for

a riverboat gaming license in June 1993, Robert Guidry met with

Andrew Martin, an aide to then-Louisiana governor Edwin Edwards, to

lobby for assistance in completing the next step in the approval

process, a suitability review before the Riverboat Gaming Division

of the Louisiana State Police.       Martin demanded that, for Guidry to

even    receive a suitability hearing, he must pay $100,000 monthly

(the “extortion payments”) to Martin, Edwin Edwards, and Stephen

Edwards.    Guidry agreed and received a suitability hearing and a

gaming license about a year later.             After Governor Edwards left

office in 1996, Guidry began making the extortion payments.

B.     The Various State and Federal Investigations

       Sometime in 1993, Doug Moreau, the District Attorney of East

Baton   Rouge   Parish,    had    begun   to    investigate    the   way     that

                                      2
particular riverboat gaming licenses had been awarded.             At about

the time in May 1994 that he was awarded his license, Guidry was

called to testify before a state grand jury that Moreau had

assembled; Guidry denied any wrongdoing. In December 1996, federal

investigators, who were also probing the awarding of riverboat

licenses, learned of the extortion scheme involving Guidry from

wiretapped conversations of Edwin Edwards.             In June 1997, Guidry

appeared   before   a   federal   grand   jury   and    invoked   his    Fifth

Amendment right against self-incrimination.            The following month,

the U.S. Attorney requested and received from Moreau transcripts of

the state grand jury proceedings. Shortly thereafter, the chairman

of the Louisiana Gaming Control Board1 met with an Assistant U.S.

Attorney, who laid out the government’s evidence of the extortion

scheme.    Despite this evidence, the Gaming Board did not revoke

Guidry’s license, instead approving his October 1997 sale of that

license for approximately $170 million.

C.   The Immunity Agreement

     After receiving a “target letter” from the government and

again being called before a federal grand jury, Guidry decided to

negotiate a plea agreement with federal prosecutors.                    Before

     1
       In May of 1996, the Louisiana Gaming Control Board
replaced the Riverboat Gaming Commission as the regulatory agency
overseeing riverboat gaming.

                                    3
reaching a deal, however, Guidry sought full immunity from state

prosecution.    The State, through Moreau, agreed to defer to the

federal government and grant Guidry full state immunity.          Guidry

successfully negotiated a plea agreement under which he pleaded

guilty in federal court to one count of conspiracy to commit

extortion in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1951 and agreed to

pay $3.5 million in fines, restitution, and forfeiture.           Guidry

also agreed to cooperate fully in the federal prosecution of his

alleged co-conspirators.   In exchange for his cooperation, federal

prosecutors agreed not to pursue any other charges or forfeiture

actions against Guidry.

D.   The State’s Civil Action

     In June 1999, Guidry was subpoenaed by the Louisiana Attorney

General to testify in an administrative hearing related to the

renewal of the riverboat gaming license that Guidry had sold in

October 1997.     Believing his testimony to be required by his

immunity agreement, which provided that he would “at all times in

the future cooperate in any state investigations or prosecutions in

related matters, and at all times provide truthful information and

testimony,” Guidry testified at the administrative hearing as to

the circumstances surrounding his procurement of the original

riverboat   gaming   license.   Several   months   later,   the    State

initiated the instant action against Guidry in Louisiana state

                                 4
court, alleging Guidry’s (1) tortious acquisition of a riverboat

license, (2) conspiracy, with Edwards and Martin, to breach their

fiduciary duties, and (3) breach of the fiduciary duty he owed to

the State as the holder of a riverboat gaming license.       At the

request of federal prosecutors, the district court stayed the

state-court proceedings pending the resolution of the criminal

prosecution of the Edwardses and Martin.

E.   Guidry Testifies, Receives Sentence; State Denied Criminal
     Restitution

     In accordance with his plea agreement, Guidry testified at the

federal trial of his co-conspirators for six days in January and

February 2000.     The following January, Guidry was sentenced to

three years probation, five-months of which were to be served in a

“halfway house,” and ordered to pay a total of $3.5 million in

fines, restitutions, and forfeitures.    At the federal sentencing

hearing, the State sought, but was denied, restitution under the

federal victim restitution law.2   The district court ruled that (1)

restitution for property loss was not appropriate, because the

State of Louisiana did not part with “property” when it issued

Guidry’s riverboat gaming license,3 and (2) restitution for any

loss suffered from Guidry’s conspiracy to breach fiduciary duty

     2
         18 U.S.C. § 3663.
     3
       The court relied on Cleveland v. United States, 531 U.S.
12, (2000).

                                   5
(his own and that of state officials) was not appropriate, because

the harm alleged by the State was not the kind of direct harm that

warrants compensation under criminal restitution statutes.

F.    The District Court Proceedings

      The federal stay of the state-court proceedings automatically

expired at the conclusion of the federal criminal proceedings, and

the   instant       case   resumed.          Guidry      first     raised     peremptory

exceptions     of    no    cause   of   action       and      no   right      of   action,

contending that the State suffered no compensable damages.                              In

denying Guidry’s exceptions, the state court (1) adopted the

rationale     of    Continental     Mgmt,        Inc.    v.   United     States,4    which

recognized that a civil tort exists for bribery of a public

official resulting          in   loss   of       loyal   service    of    a   government

official, and (2) held that Plaquemines Parish Commn. Council v.

Delta Dev. Co.5 supported the State’s claim that Guidry assumed a

fiduciary duty to the State when he accepted his riverboat gaming

license.

      Guidry applied for supervisory review in the Louisiana First

Circuit Court of Appeal.            The court of appeal denied the writ,

stating simply that “[w]e find no error in the trial court’s denial

of the exceptions of no cause of action and no right of action.”

      4
          527 F.2d 613 (Ct. Cl. 1975).
      5
          502 So. 2d 1034, 1040 (La. 1987).

                                             6
Guidry then applied to the Louisiana Supreme Court for supervisory

writs, which the court denied without comment.

     Guidry returned to the state trial court in which he filed an

answer and reconventional demand, seeking a preliminary injunction

to bar the State from pursuing the instant case.                    He based this

demand   on   his   immunized      testimony       from   the   federal   criminal

proceedings.        The    state   court       denied   Guidry’s   request   for   a

preliminary injunction, ruling that District Attorney Moreau never

intended Guidry’s immunity agreement to extend to civil claims that

the State may have against him.                  Guidry again appealed to the

Louisiana First Circuit Court of Appeal; but while that appeal was

pending, Guidry filed a third-party demand against the United

States, grounded in his reliance on assurances made by state and

federal prosecutors that the aggregate $3.5 million in fines,

penalties, and restitution would be the maximum financial sanction

imposed on him as the result of his wrongdoing. The United States

removed the entire action to federal court before Guidry’s state-

court appeal was resolved.

     After removal, Guidry filed a motion to dismiss, which was

converted, by sua sponte order of the court, to a motion for

summary judgment.         In his motion, Guidry argued, inter alia, that

the State’s allegations of (1) tortious acquisition of a riverboat

gaming license, (2) civil conspiracy to breach fiduciary duty, and

                                           7
(3) breach of fiduciary duty, did not establish any legitimate

cause of action under Louisiana law.       The district court granted

Guidry’s motion on this issue,6 and the State initiated the instant

appeal.

                           II.   ANALYSIS

A.   Preliminary Issues

     1.    Erie Doctrine

     The State first contends that the district court, in granting

Guidry’s   summary   judgment    motion,    “disregarded   Louisiana’s

substantive law” in contravention of the Erie doctrine.      The State

does not contend that the district court applied the wrong law

(e.g., federal), but rather that it misinterpreted Louisiana law or

made an improper “Erie guess.”     As the district court’s grant of

summary judgment is subject to our de novo review, we shall address

whether the district court incorrectly interpreted or predicted

Louisiana law when we review each of the bases for the court’s

ruling.    Accordingly, we need not treat the district court’s

     6
        Guidry also argued that (1) the immunity granted to him
barred the use of his immunized testimony in a civil matter, (2)
collateral estoppel barred the state’s claims, (3) the Noerr-
Pennington doctrine barred the State’s claims, and (4) the
State’s claims were prescribed. The district court did not
address any of these issues; and even though Guidry urges us to
consider them as alternative bases for affirmance, neither party
has briefed them sufficiently to allow us to do so.

                                  8
alleged failure to comply with the Erie doctrine as a separate

issue on appeal.

     2.      Law-of-the-Case Doctrine

     The State also contends that the district court violated the

law-of-the-case doctrine by dismissing the State’s suit in direct

contravention    of   the   earlier   state-court   ruling   that   denied

Guidry’s peremptory exceptions of no cause of action and no right

of action.    The State points out that, not only did the state trial

court deny Guidry’s exceptions, but the Louisiana court of appeal

”found no error in the trial court’s denial” that would warrant

supervisory review.     The State insists that, under the law-of-the-

case doctrine, this “prior ruling” may be reexamined only if “(i)

the evidence on a subsequent trial was substantially different,

(ii) controlling authority has since made a contrary decision of

the law applicable to such issues, or (iii) the decision was

clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice.”7

     Guidry responds that the state-court rulings in this case are

not entitled to control under the law-of-the-case doctrine, which

provides only that “an issue of law or fact decided on appeal may

not be reexamined either by the district court on remand or by the

     7
         Fuhrman v. Dretke, 442 F.3d 893, 897 (5th Cir. 2006).
                                      9
appellate court on a subsequent appeal.”8           He notes correctly that,

under Louisiana law, “[a] denial of supervisory review is merely a

decision not to exercise the extraordinary powers of supervisory

jurisdiction, and does not bar reconsideration of, or a different

conclusion on, the same question when appeal is taken from final

judgment.”9      Consequently, Guidry insists, denial of supervisory

review is not a “decision on appeal” and thus not entitled to law-

of-the-case status.         We agree.

     Louisiana law makes clear that an appellate court’s refusal to

grant     a   supervisory    writ   is    not   a   “decision   on   appeal.”10

Similarly, a trial court’s denial of a peremptory exception is an

interlocutory judgment, subject to reconsideration by that court.11

“[I]nterlocutory state court orders are transformed by operation of

     8
        United States v. Becerra, 155 F.3d 740, 752 (5th Cir.
1998) (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
     9
       Goodwin v. Goodwin, 607 So. 2d 8, 10 (La. App. 2 Cir.
1992) (quoting State v. Fontenot, 55 So. 2d 179 (La. 1989)
(emphasis added).
     10
          See Id.
     11
       See Bennett v. Arkansas Blue Cross Blue Shield, 943 So.
2d 1124, 1126 (La. Ct. App. 1 Cir. 2006); VaSalle v. Wal-Mart
Stores, Inc. 801 So. 2d 331, 334-35 (La. 2001) ("[I]nterlocutory
orders overruling ... peremptory exceptions cannot be binding
upon the trial court when it timely--but later--determines error
of judgment based upon the matter as submitted or upon subsequent
disclosures in the record which require a contrary holding.");
see also 1 Louisiana Civil Law Treatise-Civil Procedure, § 6.7
(4th ed. 2002).
                                         10
28 U.S.C. § 1450 into orders of the federal district court to which

the action is removed.”12        The district court here was “free to

treat the order [overruling Guidry’s peremptory exceptions] as it

would any such interlocutory order it might itself have entered.”13

As “a district court is not precluded by the law-of-the-case

doctrine from      reconsidering    previous   rulings   on   interlocutory

orders such as summary judgment motions,”14 the court was free to

consider Guidry’s motion for summary judgment, even though that

motion encompassed many of the arguments rejected by the state

trial     court   in   its   judgment    overruling   Guidry’s   peremptory

exceptions.

     For its part, the district court concluded that the state-

court ruling was “simply not controlling at the summary judgment

stage” and determined that, even if it were considered the law of

the case, it was nevertheless subject to reconsideration, because

     12
       Nissho-Iwai American Corp. v. Kline, 845 F.2d 1300, 1304
(5th Cir. 1988) (“[T]he state court's ruling is purely
interlocutory, [and] it remains subject to reconsideration just
as it had been prior to removal.”).
     13
          Id.
     14
       United States v. Palmer, 122 F.3d 215, 220 (5th Cir.
1997); see also Lavespere v. Niagara Mach. & Tool Works, Inc.,
910 F.2d 167, 185 (5th Cir. 1990) (holding that trial court is
free to reconsider and reverse its decision on an interlocutory
order “for any reason it deems sufficient, even in the absence of
new evidence or an intervening change in or clarification of the
substantive law”), abrogated on other grounds by Little v. Liquid
Air Corp., 37 F.3d 1069, 1076 (5th Cir. 1994).
                                        11
it was clearly erroneous such that adherence to it “would work a

manifest injustice . . . under the facts at hand.”15            The district

court cited, as reasons for this conclusion, the state trial

court’s (1) failure to cite Louisiana jurisprudence applicable to

the facts of this case, and (2) reliance on a case from the Court

of Claims applying a common-law doctrine, which in Louisiana is

only persuasive authority at best.

     We need not address whether the district court was correct on

that issue, however, because we are satisfied that the law-of-the-

case doctrine does not apply to the state-court ruling in this

case: Neither the trial court’s initial overruling of Guidry’s

peremptory    exceptions   nor   the    court   of   appeal’s    denial   of

supervisory review amounted to a “decision on appeal” that is

presumptively exempt from reexamination under the law-of-the-case

doctrine.16

B.   Tortious Acquisition of a Riverboat Gaming License

     The State next contends that Guidry’s wrongful conduct in

acquiring his riverboat gaming license renders him liable to the

     15
       See Fuhrman, 442 F.3d at 897 (recognizing the exceptions
to the law-of-the-case doctrine).
     16
       We are not here presented with a situation in which a
federal court with removal jurisdiction encounters a Louisiana
appellate court decision that would be considered a decision on
appeal thus requiring us to decide whether it is entitled to
law-of-the-case status in subsequent federal court proceedings.
We express no opinion on such a situation.
                                   12
State for any profit or economic advantage he derived from that

license.     To validate this contention, we would have to conclude

that either (1) Guidry’s criminal violation ipso facto creates a

civil cause of action for the State against him, or (2) Louisiana

law makes bribery of a public official actionable in tort. We

cannot credit either proposition.

     1.     Criminal Violation as Basis for Civil Action

     In denying Guidry’s exception of no cause of action, the state

trial court stated that “it is clear that a violation of a criminal

statute may provide the basis for tort liability.”         In opposition,

however, when the district court granted Guidry’s summary judgment

motion,    it   recognized   that   “criminal   statutes   may   serve   as

guidelines for the imposition of civil tort liabilities,” but noted

that “Louisiana courts use this practice sparingly when criminal

statutes such as forgery, conversion, or traffic violations are

involved.”      On appeal, the State mischaracterizes the district

court’s ruling on this point as a determination that “the violation

of a criminal statute cannot form the basis of a civil claim

against Guidry.” In truth, the district court, at most, determined

that (1) violation of a criminal statute does not automatically

                                     13
create a civil cause of action, and (2) Guidry’s conduct did not

create a cause of action for the State in this case.17            We agree.

     The district court’s legal analysis on this point is correct.

Under Louisiana law, criminal statutes may provide the standard of

care in a tort action when the other fundamental elements of a tort

(duty of care, damages) are present.           Alone, however, a criminal

violation will not create tort liability.18

     2.     Bribery as Tort

            a.   The State-Court Ruling and Continental

     In recognizing the State’s claim for tortious acquisition of

a gaming license, the state trial court explicitly adopted the

rationale of Continental Mgmt., Inc. v. United States,19 in which

the Court of Claims ruled that bribery of a public official may

create an action in tort.        In Continental, a group of mortgage

bankers sued     the   United   States   for   sums   allegedly   due   under

contracts of mortgage insurance issued by the Federal Housing

     17
       The district court also observed that Guidry pleaded
guilty only to one count of violating the Hobbs Act, and was not
convicted of a bribery violation.
     18
       Gugliuzza v. K.C.M.C., Inc., 606 So. 2d 790, 793 (La.
1992) (“Criminal statutes are not, in and of themselves,
definitive of civil liability and do not set the rule for civil
liability; but they may be guidelines for the court in fixing
civil liability.”); Pierre v. Allstate Ins. Co., 242 So. 2d 821,
829-30 (La. 1971) (same).
     19
          527 F.2d 613 (Ct. Cl. 1975).
                                    14
Administration.20          The government countersued for an amount equal

to the sum of the bribes paid to FHA and Veterans Administration

employees by a former president of the plaintiffs' predecessor

corporation.21

       The issue faced by the court in Continental was whether

criminal acts give rise to liability to the government when the

government cannot prove direct or specific monetary injury.22                   The

bankers argued, as Guidry does here, that the government must prove

that    some      damage    resulted    from    the   bribery,   and    that    the

government's        failure     to   allege    provable,   measurable       damages

warranted dismissal of its counterclaim.23 The government countered

that interference with the principal-agent relationship between it

and its employees was a compensable wrong per se, and that the

government need prove no other injury.24

       The Court of Claims began its analysis by stating the general

proposition       that     “a   third   party's   inducement     of    or   knowing

participation in a breach of duty by an agent is a wrong against

       20
527 F.2d at 614.
       21
       Id. The company president and four FHA employees had
pleaded guilty to bribery charges.
       22
            Id.
       23
            Id.
       24
            Id.
                                          15
the principal which may subject the third party to liability.”25

It acknowledged, however, that all of the cases it cited for this

proposition were “technically distinguishable” from the one before

it, because the “monetary consequences of the agents' nefarious

dealings”       in   those     cases   was     “clearer   or    more    specific.”26

Nevertheless,        the    Continental      court   found     that    those   cases’

“reasoning suggests that all who knowingly participate in a scheme

by which an agent obtains secret profits should be held liable to

the principal.”27          The court also ventured that “[a] sister line of

decisions indicates that the violation of a statutory standard of

conduct should normally meet with civil sanctions designed to

effectuate the purpose of the statute infringed.”28                       The court

reasoned that “[t]he purpose of the bribery statute-the protection

of the public from the corruption of public servants and the evil

consequences of that corruption-will obviously be furthered by the

recognition of a civil remedy.”29

     The Continental court then addressed the proof-of-damages

issue.    For several reasons, it accepted the government’s position

     25
          Id. at 616-17 (citations omitted).
     26
          Id. at 617.
     27
          Id.
     28
          Id. (citations omitted).
     29
          Id.
                                          16
that “it is enough to show the fact and amount of the bribes —

nothing further need be alleged or proved by way of specific or

direct injury.”30      First, it pointed out that “the briber deprives

the Government of the loyalty of its employees, upon which the

Government and the public must rely for the impartial and rigorous

enforcement of government programs.”31           Next, the court recognized

that “[b]ribery of officials can also cause a diminution in the

public's confidence in the Government, upon which the Government

must also rely.”32         Finally, the court noted, “[t]he Government

likewise incurs the administrative costs of firing and replacing

the venal employees and the costs of investigation, all of which

are compensable in fraud cases.”33

     The court then recited the “old maxim of the law that, where

the fact of injury is adequately shown, the court should not cavil

at the absence of specific or detailed proof of the damages.”34 The

court concluded that even though “[s]ignificant elements of []

harm, such      as   the   injury   to   the   impartial   administration   of

governmental programs, are not susceptible to an accurate monetary

     30
          Id. at 618.
     31
          Id.
     32
          Id.
     33
          Id.
     34
          Id. at 619.
                                         17
gauge,” it would not deny the government relief simply because its

injury was “not readily traceable or measurable.”35 In the end, the

court held that “the amount of the bribe provides a reasonable

measure of damage, in the absence of a more precise yardstick.”

     The State’s argument in this case is largely the same as that

made by the government in Continental.   The State contends that (1)

Guidry owed a duty to the State not to improperly obtain a

riverboat gaming license, and (2) in breaching that duty, he caused

the State to lose the gaming license itself, the loyal service of

its Governor and his assistant, and the honest and impartial

administration of its government.    Moreover, the State insists

that, despite the difficulty of determining the quantum of its

damages, it is entitled to recover general damages for its loss.

            b.   Damages

     In its summary judgment analysis of the State’s tortious

acquisition claim, the district court focused on whether the State

suffered compensable damages from Guidry’s wrongdoing.    The court

did not address whether Guidry owed a general duty of care to the

State or, if so, whether he breached that duty.36    As the parties

have not asked us to decide that issue on appeal, we address only

     35
          Id.
     36
       The court separately considered, as will we, the State’s
claim that Guidry breach a fiduciary duty to the state.
                                18
whether the State suffered damages compensable through a tort

action.

                    i.      The Gaming License

     In its ruling, the district court first clarified that a

riverboat gaming license is not “property,” the loss of which could

provide the basis for a tort action.             The court cited § 27.42(B) of

the Louisiana Riverboat Economic Development And Gaming Control

Act, which sets forth the public policy regarding riverboat gaming:

     Any license, permit, approval, or thing obtained or
     issued pursuant to the provisions of this Chapter is
     expressly declared by the legislature to be a pure and
     absolute revocable privilege and not a right, property or
     otherwise, under the constitutions of the United States
     or of the state of Louisiana.37

The court reasoned that “because the State could not have been

deprived of any property interest from the issuance of [Guidry’s

license], it may not claim damages equivalent to the value of the

license.”

     The    court    found     further    support    for   this   conclusion    in

Cleveland v. United States,38 in which the Supreme Court unanimously

held that a regulator who issues a Louisiana video poker license

does not     part    with    “property”    for    purposes   of   prosecuting    a

     37
          La. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 27.42(B) (emphasis added).
     38
          531 U.S. 12 (2000).
                                         19
licensee under the federal mail fraud statute.39                 The Court in

Cleveland held that “whatever interests Louisiana might be said to

have in its video poker licenses, the State's core concern is

regulatory,” then distinguished each of Louisiana’s interests in

its poker licenses from true “property” interests.40

      The district court determined that the regulatory system

established by the Louisiana legislature provides an alternative

civil remedy for an improper acquisition of a gaming license ——

revocation of that license.       It also noted that, in this case, the

State elected not to avail itself of that remedy after discovering

Guidry’s unlawful conduct, opting instead to approve Guidry’s sale

of his riverboat license to a third party.           The court reasoned that

the State, having eschewed the legislatively-created remedy of

revoking improperly acquired licenses, should not now be allowed

“to create a new means of seeking retribution” for that conduct.

      The State insists that the district court’s reliance on

Cleveland was misplaced, as Cleveland’s holding applies only to

federal mail fraud cases and “has no bearing on a civil action for

damages.”        It contends that Guidry’s alleged tort is analogous to

(1)   unauthorized       possession   of   movable    property    (civil   law

conversion), (2) the common law tort of conversion, or (3) the

      39
           Id. at 20-26.
      40
           Id.
                                      20
unauthorized use of a franchise.           Finally, the State asserts that

whether the riverboat gaming license is “property” or a “privilege”

is not important, because the nature of the right associated with

the license “does not diminish the nature of the damage sustained

by the State as a result of Guidry’s tortious conduct,” and “a loss

of property is not essential to recovery in tort.”

      The State’s first three contentions are unavailing.              As noted

earlier, Louisiana law is clear that awarding a riverboat gaming

license does not confer on the licensee a property right of any

kind.      Awarding   such   a   license    may   create   tangible    economic

benefits for both the State and the licensee, but, in making the

award to Guidry, the State did not transfer any “property” interest

to him, such that it may demand that Guidry return the value of

that interest as part of a tort recovery.                  Consequently, the

State’s attempts to analogize its claim to one for unauthorized

possession of movable property, common law conversion, or the

unauthorized use of a franchise, are fruitless. As the cases cited

by the State illustrate, all of those claims involve interference

with discreet, determinable property rights.41

      Furthermore, the State’s contention that the common law tort

of   conversion   “has   been    inferred”    from   article    2315    of   the

      41
       See, e.g., Dual Drilling Co. v. Mills Equip. Inv., Inc.,
721 So. 2d 853 (La. 1998) (involving unauthorized possession of
an oil rig).
                                      21
Louisiana Civil Code is simply incorrect.                In Dual Drilling, the

case    that   the    State    cites   for    this   proposition,     the    court

indisputably held otherwise:

       Despite the use of this common law term, such actions are
       not to be confused with the civil law tort of conversion.
       In common law jurisdictions, conversion is an intentional
       wrong giving rise to strict liability in an action for
       the recovery of the value of a chattel
       . . . .
       “and the absolute liability which characterizes [common
       law] conversion is in direct conflict with Article 2315
       of the Louisiana Civil Code and the principle that
       liability for wrongful dispossession rests on fault.”42

Finally, the State cites no authority for its contention that its

tortious-acquisition          claim   resembles   that    of   a   franchisee   or

licensee for unauthorized use of intellectual property.                     By its

very nature, such a claim must involve a “property” interest held

by the plaintiff, and Louisiana law provides unequivocally that the

State neither has nor transfers a property interest in a riverboat

gaming license.            The same “un-property” analysis used by the

Supreme Court in Cleveland for a video poker license fits that

purpose for riverboat gaming license. The distinction in the crime

framework of the cases is immaterial.

                     ii.    General Damages

       42
721 So. 2d at 857 n.3 (quoting A.N. Yiannopoulos,
Louisiana Civil Law Treatise §§ 357, 359 at 690-92, 695).

                                         22
     The State next contends that it is entitled to recover general

damages for its loss resulting from Guidry’s participation in a

bribery scheme confected by then-Louisiana Governor Edwards. It is

axiomatic that “property” rights are not a prerequisite to tort

recovery.    Louisiana courts routinely award “general damages” for

losses such     as   pain   and    suffering     or   inconvenience   that    are

“inherently     speculative       in   nature   and   cannot   be   fixed    with

mathematical certainty.”43         In this case, the       State alleges that

it suffered the loss of (1) reputation, and (2) honest and loyal

service of its employees, for which it has the right to recover.

To support this proposition, the State again cites Continental and

analogizes its claim to one for general damages resulting from

libel or defamation.

     The district court did not directly address the viability of

the State’s claim for general damages.                Nonetheless, we presume

that the district court found those damages insufficient to support

a tort claim.    The court did address the Continental case, however,

and concluded that it was “clearly not binding authority” because

the common law doctrine on which it relies is, at most, persuasive

authority for a court applying Louisiana law. The district court’s

observation is plainly accurate.             Louisiana tort law is primarily

     43
          Wainwright v. Fontenot, 774 So. 2d 70, 74 (La. 2000).

                                        23
based in the Louisiana Civil Code and is informed by the relevant

interpretations       thereof   by    courts     of    competent    jurisdiction.

Courts applying Louisiana law may regard decisions based on the

common     law   as   persuasive,         but   not    as   binding    authority.

Consequently, the district court was in no way bound to follow the

reasoning of the Continental case.

     The district court also observed that, unlike the Continental

case, in     which    the   Court    of    Claims     justified    imposing   civil

remedies as a way to further the goals of the federal bribery

statute, Louisiana already has an alternative civil remedy for the

improper acquisition of a riverboat gaming license (through bribery

or otherwise) —— revocation of the license.                 This observation is

compelling.      If the State had elected to revoke Guidry’s gaming

license after learning of his misconduct, he would not have been

able to sell it for $170 million.               That remedy, then, would have

had the same effect on Guidry as the State now seeks in tort,

forfeiture of his ill-gotten gains.                 The record provides little

insight into the State’s reasons for having foregone the remedy of

revocation, but none disputes that the appropriate state regulatory

agency knew of Guidry’s illicit conduct prior to his sale of his

license.     The district court was correct, then, to rebuff the

State’s attempt to justify a novel tort action on the grounds that

allowing a civil remedy would bolster the criminal bribery statute,

                                          24
when Louisiana already had established an alternative civil remedy

that would         serve the same purpose in situations like the one

presented here.

       For his part, Guidry attacks the State’s general damages claim

by noting that no court applying Louisiana law has ever awarded

tort damages for bribery of a public official.           Such a claim, he

argues, is easily distinguishable from defamation, which has long

been    recognized     as   involving    compensable   harm,   despite   the

difficulty in calculating the value of that harm.

       As to Guidry’s first point, the State does not dispute that no

court applying Louisiana law has ever awarded the government

general damages for loss of reputation or loyal services resulting

from the bribery of a public official.          The State cites only the

Continental case and two district court decisions in support of its

proposition that such a tort remedy exists.               It provides no

Louisiana cases, pointing instead to the Louisiana Supreme Court’s

observation that public bribery constitutes “wrong done to the

people by the corruption in public service,”44 as evidence that

recognizing a civil remedy would further the goal of the criminal

bribery laws. Regarding its suggestion of an analogy to defamation

claims, the State does not compare the nature of the offense at

issue       here   (bribery,   fraudulent    license   acquisition)      with

       44
            State v. Bloomenstiel, 106 So. 2d 288, 290 (La. 1958).
                                        25
defamation; it simply states that awarding general damages here

would be no different than awarding a defamation plaintiff general

damages.

            iii. Conclusion

       For the following reasons, we agree with the district court

that Guidry’s conduct in acquiring his riverboat gaming license

does not render him liable to the State in tort for any profit or

economic advantage he derived from that license. First, bribery is

a crime, and as a crime it subjects the briber to a range of

penalties, including restitution to the victim.              As detailed

earlier, Guidry has already been punished for his crime, and the

State did not qualify as a victim of Guidry’s criminal conduct

deserving of restitution.

       Second, despite the State’s contentions to the contrary,

Louisiana courts do not generally equate criminal violations with

compensable tortious conduct.     Only in rare instances do Louisiana

courts even treat a criminal violation as clear evidence of a

breach of the applicable civil standard of care.

       Third, the losses that the State alleges it suffered are more

than    “difficult   to   calculate”;   they   are   so   attenuated   and

speculative that they cannot form the basis of a tort action.

Unlike in defamation cases, which involve direct attacks by one

party on the good name of another, any loss of reputation in this

                                   26
case was a by-product of a crime motivated by the greed of its

participants. Even though bribery of a public official undoubtedly

will, if discovered, affect a state’s reputation, the same is true

of all crimes, to some greater or lesser degree.   As Guidry notes,

such loss of reputation is one of the multifarious elements of the

“societal harm” that a state’s criminal laws are designed to

redress, but only rarely will such loss provide the basis for a

tort claim.     Guidry’s case does not present one of those rare

instances.

     Furthermore, the State’s claim for loss of the “loyal service”

of its employees is dubious at best.     The State’s entitlement to

the services of its employees arises from its contract with those

employees.    As Guidry observes, Louisiana has already rejected the

notion that the State “owns” the services of its employees:

     The parish and the state cannot own the services of their
     employees. It has been held that ownership of services is
     not conveyed by a contract with the party to whom they
     are rendered because the knowledge or skill which a man
     possesses is not subject to ownership. Gonsalves v.
     Hodgson, 38 Cal. 2d 91, 237 P.2d 656 (1951). Human effort
     and work are not the subject of ownership. If anyone owns
     them it is the employees themselves . . . .45

As such, we cannot conceive how the State could recover general

tort damages for the loss of the loyal service of its employees.

     45
       State v. Gisclair, 382 So. 2d 914, 916 (La. 1980)
(construing whether services of employees were “movables” within
meaning of unauthorized use of movables statute).

                                 27
     Finally, as noted earlier, Louisiana has chosen its civil

remedy to address improper acquisition of a riverboat gaming

license —— revocation. Had the State revoked Guidry’s license when

it first learned of his conduct, it would have achieved largely the

same results it seeks now, i.e., preventing Guidry from profiting

from his criminal activity and furthering the purpose of the

criminal bribery statute.    Of course, only tort recovery would

allow the State to keep for itself the ill-gotten gains generated

by Guidry’s sale of the license.

     For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s

grant of summary judgment on the State’s claim against Guidry for

tortious acquisition of a riverboat gaming license.

C.   Fiduciary Duty Claims

     1.   Conspiracy

     The State next contends that Guidry is liable for conspiring

in the breach of the fiduciary duties owed to the State by then-

Governor Edwards and his assistant, Andrew Martin. The State bases

this contention on Article 2324 of the Louisiana Civil Code, which

states, in pertinent part:

     He who conspires with another person to commit an
     intentional or willful act is answerable, in solido, with
     that person, for the damage caused by such act.

Prior to its amendment in 1987, this article read:

                                28
     He who cause another person to do an unlawful act, or
     assists or encourages in the commission of it, is
     answerable, in solido, with that person, for the damage
     caused by such act.

     When that version of Article 2324 was in effect, courts

interpreted “unlawful act” to mean “tortious conduct” and applied

the article only to conspiracies based on an underlying tort.46           An

action against a fiduciary may involve his failure to meet some

general standard of care (negligence) and therefore sound in tort.

In contrast, an action for breach of a fiduciary duty arises from

the special relationship between the fiduciary and the one who

claims    the   duty   [or   “principal”],   which   therefore   arises   in

contract (or quasi-contract).47       As such, a breach of a fiduciary

     46
       See Roussel Pump & Elec. Co. v. Sanderson, 216 So. 2d 650
(La. Ct. App. 4 Cir. 1969) (“A breach of this [fiduciary]
obligation may be cause for legal redress against the offending
officer in a proper action ex contractu, but it is not an
‘unlawful’ act within the contemplation of LSA-C.C. art. 2324.”);
see also Hartman v. Greene, 190 So. 390, 391 (La. 1939)(“The term
‘an unlawful act’ does not mean necessarily a criminal act; it
means a wrongful act, or a tort-any wrongful act (not involving a
breach of contract) for which a civil action will lie.”).
     47
       See de la Vergne v. de la Vergne, 745 So. 2d 1271, 1275
(La. Ct. App. 4 Cir. 1999)(“[C]ourts must consider the underlying
claim to determine if the action is indeed one for breach of a
fiduciary duty which is governed by the 10 year prescriptive
period [for contract actions] or merely a suit against a
fiduciary for negligence which is governed by the one year
prescriptive period.”).
                                     29
duty would not provide a basis for conspiratorial liability under

the previous version of article 2324.48

       The State concedes both that (1) a breach of fiduciary duty

arises in contract, and (2) the pre-revision version of article

2324    recognized      conspiratorial    liability     only   for   those   who

participate      in    or   induce   tortious   acts.    The   State    insists,

however, that, by replacing “unlawful act” with “intentional and

willful act,” the Louisiana legislature broadened the applicability

of article 2324 beyond actions based in tort.             The district court

concluded      that,    even   post-revision,    a   conspiracy   claim    under

article 2324 will only lie if the underlying act is tortious (and

not contractual or quasi-contractual) in nature.

       For its part, the State relies primarily on decisions from

common-law jurisdictions recognizing that one who conspires with a

fiduciary in a breach of the fiduciary’s duty is liable to the

principal.49      In the State’s view on appeal, the 1987 revision to

Civil Code article 2324 brings Louisiana law into consonance with

the laws of other jurisdictions in the United States.                  The State

does cite Guidry v. Bank of LaPlace,50 and C & B Sales and Servs.

       48
            See Roussel, 216 So. 2d at 655.
       49
            Citations omitted.
       50
            661 So. 2d 1052 (La. Ct. App. 4 Cir. 1995).
                                        30
v. McDonald,51 both cases decided under Louisiana law in which the

plaintiff asserted an article 2324 conspiracy claim based on breach

of fiduciary duty.    In the State’s view, these cases stand for the

proposition that one who conspires with a fiduciary to breach a

fiduciary duty is liable in solido with the fiduciary to his

principal.

     In its summary judgment ruling, the district court first

observed that courts have continued to interpret revised article

2324 as applying only to conspiracies involving an underlying

tort.52    The court also noted that we have recognized that, even

though “the 1987 amendments changed the language of La. Civ. Code

art. 2324(A), the pre-amendment conspiracies still provide guidance

as to the applicable law in regards to conspiracies.”53   Therefore,

reasoned the district court, article 2324 continues to apply only

to alleged conspiracies in which the unlawful act is tortious

conduct.     The district court also cited two post-revision cases

from the Eastern District of Louisiana recognizing that article

2324 conspiracy claims still must involve an underlying tort.54

     51
          95 F.3d 1308, 1316 (5th Cir. 1996).
     52
          See infra notes 53-54.
     53
       See C & B Sales, 95 F.3d at 1316; Chrysler Credit Corp.
v. Whitney Nat. Bank, 51 F.3d 553, 557 (5th Cir. 1995).
     54
       See Jefferson v. Lead Industries Ass’n, Inc., 930 F. Supp.
241, 247-248 (E.D. La. 1996) (“Louisiana law does not recognize
                                   31
     The district court challenged the State’s reliance on Guidry

as well.   It concluded that the Guidry court did not recognize an

action under article 2324 for conspiracy to breach a fiduciary

duty, but simply adopted the reasoning from Nat’l Union Fire Ins.

Co. that the 1987 amendments merely rephrased the article “in terms

of conspiracy, conformable with the jurisprudence.”55

     Finally,     the    district        court    addressed    the    common-law

authorities     cited    by   the    State.        Acknowledging     that   those

authorities may lend support to the State’s argument that a cause

of action for conspiracy to breach a fiduciary duty may be treated

as a tort, the court reiterated that common-law authority is only

persuasive in Louisiana.            The court quoted from two Louisiana

Supreme Court decisions clarifying that “the proper analysis to

determine [a] defendant’s liability is to be found in Louisiana’s

substantive   law   as    found     in   the     Louisiana   Civil   Code”56   and

cautioning that “‘due to underlying fundamental differences in

conceptual technique and methodology, borrowing of common law rules

an independent cause of action for civil conspiracy . . . . The
actionable element under article 2324 is the intentional tort the
conspirators agreed to commit and committed in whole or in part
causing plaintiff's injury.”); Rhyce v. Martin, 173 F. Supp. 2d
521, 535 (E.D. La 2001) (discussing the ruling in C & B Sales).
     55
       See Guidry, 661 So. 2d at 1058 (quoting Nat’l Union Fire
Ins. Co., 552 So. 2d at 634).
     56
       Porteous v. St. Ann’s Café and Deli, 713 So. 2d 454, 455
(La. 1998).
                                         32
for the solution of problems arising under Louisiana law is both

unnecessary and confusing.’”57   In adherence to these directives,

the district court disregarded the common-law authority provided by

the State and held that, because “under Louisiana law, a breach of

fiduciary duty only arises in contract . . . [the State’s] cause of

action for conspiracy to breach a fiduciary duty lacks an essential

element - an underlying intentional tort” and must fail.

     The district court’s reasoning is sound.       Even after the

revision of article 2324, Louisiana courts continue to recognize

that its application is limited to conspiracies involving tortious

conduct.58   Additionally, the district court’s observations about

the necessity or propriety of adopting common-law tort principles

into Louisiana law are also correct.    Despite many similarities to

common law, Louisiana courts may not and should not facilely adhere

to common-law authority as precedent.    Consequently, the district

court was justified in limiting its guiding authority to Louisiana-

court decisions interpreting the Civil Code.    We therefore affirm

     57
       Dual Drilling Co. v. Mills Equip. Inv., Inc., 721 So. 2d
853, 857 n.3 (quoting A.N. Yiannopoulos, Louisiana Civil Law
Treatise § 359, at 695).
     58
       See, e.g., Thomas v. North 40 Land Development, Inc., 894
So. 2d 1160, 1174 (La. Ct. App. 4 Cir. 2005) ; Sullivan v.
Wallace, 859 So. 2d 245, 248 (La. Ct. App. 2 Cir. 2003); Aranyosi
v. Delchamps, Inc., 739 So. 2d 911, 917 (La. Ct. App. 1 Cir.
1999); Butz v. Lynch, 710 So. 2d 1171, 1174 (La. Ct. App. 1 Cir.
1998); Hall v. Lilly, 697 So. 2d 676, 678-79 (La. Ct. App. 2 Cir.
1997).
                                 33
the district court’s summary judgment dismissal of the State’s

cause of action for Guidry’s conspiracy to breach the fiduciary

duty of another, as “lack[ing] an essential element — an underlying

tort.”

     2.    Guidry’s Alleged Fiduciary Duty

     The State next contends that Guidry owed it a fiduciary duty

by virtue of his holding a riverboat gaming license.         The State

bases this contention on its assertion that Louisiana law imposes

“duties of good faith, honesty, candor, and confidence” on such

licensees.   These duties, the State insists, amount to a fiduciary

duty in favor of the State.     Guidry responds that the statutory

duties imposed on riverboat gaming licensees are “hefty,” but do

not rise to the high level of a fiduciary duty, either singly or in

combination.   The district court agreed with Guidry, and so do we.

     In trying to support its contention that the duty owed to it

by Guidry as a riverboat gaming license holder is that of a

fiduciary, the State references several provisions of the version

of the Louisiana Riverboat Economic Development and Gaming Control

Act that was in effect during the time Guidry held his riverboat

gaming license. Specifically, the State notes that, under that

version of the Gaming Control Act, (1) applicants for gaming

licenses   were    screened   for    “good   character,   honesty,   and

                                    34
integrity,”59 required to disclose those having a financial interest

in the gaming license, and prohibited from making false statements

in their applications;60 and (2) license holders were required to

report any violations of the Gaming Control Act.61             The State also

quotes     from   Capitol    Houses     Preservation     Co.    v.    Perryman

Consultants, Inc., in which an intermediate state appellate court

observed that “the [Louisiana] legislature placed dual duties on

the [riverboat gaming] applicants and licensees, first a duty to be

honest and complete in the initial representations , and second, a

continuing     duty   to    disclose        any   dishonest    or    fraudulent

misrepresentation.”62       The State urges us to conclude that these

obligations produce a fiduciary duty.

     In addressing this issue, the district court recognized that

the Louisiana legislature has imposed many obligations on gaming

licensees and applicants.      It disagreed, however, with the State’s

contention that these obligations operate to create a fiduciary

duty.     The court first stated that, according to the Louisiana

Uniform Fiduciaries Law, a “fiduciary” includes the following:

     59
          La. Rev. Stat. § 27:70(A)(1) (repealed 2001).
     60
          La. Rev. Stat. § 27:99 (repealed 2001).
     61
          La. Rev. Stat. § 27:70(C) (repealed 2001).
     62
          725 So. 2d 523, 528 n.8 (La. Ct. App. 1 Cir. 1998).
                                       35
     a trustee under any trust, expressed, implied, resulting
     or constructive, executor, administrator, guardian,
     conservator, curator, receiver, trustee in bankruptcy,
     assignee for the benefit of creditors, partner, agent,
     officer of a corporation, public or private, public
     officer, or any other persons acting in a fiduciary
     capacity for any person, trust or estate.63

Next, the court quoted the Louisiana Supreme Court’s holding that

“[o]ne is said to act in a ‘fiduciary capacity’ . . . when the

business which he transacts, or the money or property which he

handles, is not his own or for his own benefit, but for the benefit

of another.”64    The court then observed:

     Clearly, based on the Louisiana statutory authority,
     Guidry does not fall into one of the enumerated
     categories of fiduciary (i.e., Guidry was not a trustee,
     guardian, executor, etc.). Nor did Guidry act as the
     State’s fiduciary, when conducting business transactions
     as a casino operator; the business transactions Guidry
     entered into were soley [sic] for his own benefit, they
     were not entered into on behalf of the State, and, as
     previously discussed, the business transactions did not
     involve a property right.

     On    appeal,     the   State   insists   that   the    district     court’s

adoption    of   the   definition     of    “fiduciary”     set   forth   in   the

Louisiana Uniform Fiduciaries Law was improper.              That law, asserts

the State, deals exclusively with issues regarding the payment of

money, the endorsement of negotiable instruments, and the deposit

of funds, and is intended only to protect third parties, such as

     63
          La. Rev. Stat. § 9:3801(2).
     64
          State v. Hagerty, 205 So. 2d 369, 374 (La. 1968).
                                       36
banks, that conduct transactions with “fiduciaries” as defined by

the Uniform Fiduciaries Law.               The State argues that “[w]hether a

fiduciary relationship exists is most often a fact question that

can   be    determined      only   after     an   evaluation      of    the    evidence

presented to the Court.”65           It submits that statutory authority is

not a prerequisite to the imposition of a fiduciary duty under

Louisiana     law,      adding     that    courts   have        found   such       duties

established, absent a specific statutory provision, even when

“detailed, comprehensive, statutes govern [an] area of law.”66

      The    only    case    cited    by    the   State    in    support      of    these

contentions is        Plaquemines Parish Comm’n Council v. Delta Dev.

Co., in which the Louisiana Supreme Court held that a parish

attorney owed a fiduciary duty to his statutory clients based on

his position both as a public official and an attorney.67 The State

quotes one passage of that holding in which the court observes that

“[t]he dominant characteristic of a fiduciary relationship is the

confidence reposed by one in the other.”                  A later passage reveals

a slightly different proposition: “A fiduciary relationship has

been further described as one that exists ‘when confidence is

      65
           Id. at 50.
      66
           Id. at 53.
      67
           502 So. 2d 1034, 1040-41 (La. 1987).
                                           37
reposed    on   one    side   and    there      is    resulting    superiority   and

influence on the other.’”68

     The State’s argument on this point fails.                    Delta Development

involved an entirely different type of relationship than the one at

issue here, and therefore provides little support for the State’s

position. It does appear from the Commissioner’s Prefatory Note to

the Uniform Fiduciaries Act that the Act was meant to apply only to

“situations which arise where one person deals with another person

whom he knows to be a fiduciary,” and does not address the

liabilities      of   the     fiduciary      himself.69         Nevertheless,    the

definition      set   forth   in    that   Act       is   instructive.   Moreover,

Louisiana courts largely incorporate it as part of the definition

of “fiduciary” typically adopted even outside of the context of the

Act. For example, in State v. Hagerty, the Louisiana Supreme Court

observed:

     The word “fiduciary,” as a noun, means one who holds a
     thing in trust for another, a trustee; a person holding
     the character of a trustee, or a character analogous to
     that of a trustee, with respect to the trust and
     confidence involved in it and the scrupulous good faith
     and candor which it requires; a person having the duty,
     created by his undertaking, to act primarily for
     another's benefit in matters connected with such
     undertaking. Also more specifically, in a statute, a

     68
       Delta Dev., 502 So. 2d at 1041 (quoting Toombs v.
Daniels, 361 N.W.2d 801, 809 (Minn.1985) (citations omitted))
(emphasis added).
     69
          See La. Rev. Stat, Title 9, Code Title XV, Chapter 1.
                                           38
     guardian, trustee, executor, administrator, receiver,
     conservator, or any person acting in any fiduciary
     capacity for any person, trust, or estate.70

     Even if we were to agree with the State’s position that the

list of fiduciaries enumerated in Louisiana’s Uniform Fiduciaries

Law is not exclusive, we still would not hold that a riverboat

gaming license holder meets the only slightly broader definition

adopted by the Louisiana Supreme Court. As discussed earlier, such

a gaming license does not transfer any property interest from the

State to the licensee; neither does a riverboat gaming licensee

“act primarily” for the State’s benefit.      Any benefits the State

derives from riverboat gaming are welcome by-products, but not the

“primary” purpose, of the licensor-licensee relationship.        We

therefore affirm the district court’s summary judgment dismissal of

the State’s breach of fiduciary duty claim against Guidry.

                          III.   CONCLUSION

     For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s order granting

summary judgment for Guidry to reject the State’s claims for (1)

tortious acquisition of a riverboat gaming license, (2) conspiracy

in the breach of a fiduciary duty, and (3) breach of a fiduciary

duty is, in all respects,

AFFIRMED.

     70
          205 So. 2d 369, 374 (La. 1968).
                                   39