Simon v. FDIC ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ____________________
    No. 93-2319

    FRANKLIN W. SIMON,
    WEBB PLACE CONDOMINIUMS, INC.
    and GREYSTONE CONDOMINIUMS, INC.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION,
    as Receiver of 1st American Bank for Savings,

    Defendant, Appellee.

    ____________________


    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, Senior U.S. District Judge] __________________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Cyr, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________


    Lee H. Kozol, with whom David A. Rich and Friedman & Atherton _____________ ______________ ____________________
    were on brief for appellants.
    J. Scott Watson, with whom Ann S. DuRoss and Richard J. Osterman, _______________ _____________ ____________________
    Jr. were on brief for appellee. ___

    ____________________

    February 23, 1995
    ____________________
















    CYR, Circuit Judge. Plaintiffs-appellants Franklin W. CYR, Circuit Judge. _____________

    Simon ("Simon"), Webb Place Condominiums, Inc. ("Webb Place") and

    Greystone Condominiums, Inc. ("Greystone") initiated this action

    in Massachusetts state court against the Federal Deposit Insur-

    ance Corporation ("FDIC"), receiver of 1st American Bank for

    Savings ("Bank"), seeking declaratory and equitable relief

    relating to two real estate loan agreements between plaintiffs-

    appellants and the Bank. Following removal, the United States

    District Court for the District of Massachusetts dismissed the

    action on jurisdictional grounds pursuant to the Financial

    Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act ("FIRREA"), 12

    U.S.C. 1821(d)(13)(D) (1994). We affirm.

    I I

    BACKGROUND BACKGROUND __________

    In January 1988, Simon, president and sole stockholder

    of Greystone and Webb Place (collectively: "Borrowers"), entered

    into two mortgage loan agreements with the Bank, whereby Grey-

    stone borrowed $2,500,000 and Webb Place borrowed a total of

    $3,150,000 with which to finance condominium development pro-

    jects. The loans were secured by mortgages on the properties to

    be developed and by Simon's personal guaranty.

    When the loans matured on January 31, 1990, the Borrow-

    ers sought extensions and further advances to enable completion

    of the projects. On August 14, 1990, with the outstanding loan

    balances at $2,500,000 on the Greystone loan and $2,295,490 on

    the Webb Place loan, the Borrowers entered into two separate Loan


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    Modification Agreements ("Modification Agreements"), whereby the

    Bank waived all accrued and future interest on the original

    January 1988 loans and extended their maturity dates to May 31,

    1992. The Bank further agreed to lend an additional $816,000 to

    Greystone and $520,942 to Webb Place, to be disbursed upon the

    Borrowers' request, for completion of the projects. Finally, the

    Bank agreed to provide end-loan financing to individual buyers of

    the completed condominium units.

    The Borrowers in turn agreed to complete construction

    of the mortgaged properties under the supervision of an indepen-

    dent engineer, to devise a marketing plan acceptable to the Bank,

    and to pay the Bank 100% of the net proceeds from the sale of any

    unit in the mortgaged properties in return for a partial release

    of the Bank's mortgage lien. Simon secured his loan guaranties

    with two certificates of deposit and with mortgages on two real

    estate properties owned by him. In return, the Bank agreed to

    limit Simon's total liability on the personal guaranty to $900-

    ,000.

    All construction loan requisitions by the Borrowers

    were honored in due course by the Bank until October 18, 1990,

    when a requisition for $204,657 was dishonored. The following

    day, the Bank closed and FDIC was appointed receiver.

    On October 24, FDIC published notice of its appointment

    as receiver, alerting creditors that all claims against the Bank

    were to be submitted to FDIC by January 23, 1991 ("bar date").

    On October 25, FDIC mailed notice to all known Bank creditors


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    and, on October 31, notice of FDIC's appointment as liquidating

    agent of the Bank was mailed to plaintiffs-appellants. Although

    plaintiffs-appellants did not receive FDIC's notice, they were

    aware prior to the bar date that FDIC had been appointed receiver

    of the Bank.

    On October 31, plaintiffs-appellants requested that

    FDIC advise as to its position respecting further loan disburse-

    ments under the Modification Agreements. FDIC did not reply. On

    November 27, plaintiffs-appellants informed FDIC that the Bank

    was in default under the Modification Agreements for refusing

    their October 18 requisition. Their letter demanded that the

    Borrowers' requisitions be met and that the collateral securing

    Simon's personal guaranty be released due to the Bank's default.

    FDIC did not reply.

    The present action was commenced on April 21, 1992, in

    state court. Simon sued to recover all collateral pledged to

    secure his personal guaranty and for a judicial declaration that

    his personal obligations under the guaranty had been extinguished

    as a result of the Bank's and FDIC's defaults under the Modifica-

    tion Agreements. The Borrowers sought a judicial declaration

    entitling them to a "priority position" among Bank creditors on

    all obligations incurred by the Borrowers to third parties after

    FDIC took possession of the Bank's assets.

    After removal, the federal district court granted the

    FDIC motion for summary judgment. It found that neither Simon

    nor the Borrowers had filed proofs of claim with FDIC despite


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    having received actual notice of FDIC's appointment. Plaintiffs-

    appellants thus having failed to exhaust their administrative

    remedies, the district court ruled that their claims were barred

    under 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(13)(D)(i).



    II II

    DISCUSSION DISCUSSION __________


    Summary judgment rulings are reviewed de novo to __ ____

    determine whether the "'pleadings, depositions, answers to inter-

    rogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits,

    if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material

    fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a

    matter of law.'" Gaskell v. The Harvard Coop. Soc'y, 3 F.3d 495, _______ _______________________

    497 (1st Cir. 1993) (quoting Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)). We view the

    evidence in the light most favorable to the party resisting

    summary judgment. Velez-Gomez v. SMA Life Assurance Co., 8 F.3d ___________ ______________________

    873, 874-75 (1st Cir. 1993).


    A. The Simon Guaranty A. The Simon Guaranty __________________

    Simon contends that FDIC surrendered all claims to the

    collateral pledged to secure his personal guaranty because the

    Bank's (and FDIC's subsequent) breach of the Modification Agree-

    ments discharged Simon from all liability.

    Section 1821(d)(13)(D)(i) bars all claims against the

    assets of a failed financial institution which have not been

    presented under the administrative claims review process (-


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    "ACRP"), see 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(3)-(10), governing the filing, ___

    determination, and payment of claims against the assets of failed

    financial institutions following FDIC's appointment as receiver.

    Heno v. FDIC, 20 F.3d 1204, 1206-07 (1st Cir. 1994). Upon its ____ ____

    appointment as receiver, FDIC is required to publish notice that

    the failed institution's creditors must file claims with FDIC by

    a specified date not less than ninety days after the date of

    publication. 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(3)(B). FDIC is also required

    to mail notice to all known creditors of the failed institution.

    Id. 1821(d)(3)(C). It has 180 days from the date of filing to ___

    allow or disallow claims. Id. 1821(d)(5)(A)(i). Claimants ___

    have sixty days from the date of disallowance, or from the

    expiration of the 180-day administrative decision deadline,

    within which to seek judicial review in an appropriate United

    States district court. Id. 1821(d)(6)(A). Failure to comply ___

    with the ACRP deprives the courts of subject matter jurisdiction

    over any claim to assets of the failed financial institution.

    See id. 1821(d)(13)(D)(i). ___ ___

    Simon argues that the instant claim for the return of

    all collateral securing his personal guaranty is not subject to

    the ACRP because it is not a creditor's claim against the Bank's

    assets but merely a defense to the contingent loan guaranty held

    by the Bank. Cf. In re Purcell, 141 B.R. 480, 485 (Bankr. D. Vt. ___ _____________

    1992), aff'd, 150 B.R. 111 (D. Vt. 1993). But see Deera Homes, _____ ___ ___ ____________

    Inc. v. Metrobank for Sav., FSB, 812 F. Supp. 375, 377-78 (E.D.- ____ _______________________

    N.Y. 1993). As Simon sees it, therefore, he is entitled to a


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    judgment declaring that the Modification Agreements were breached

    by the Bank and, consequently, his personal guaranty is unen-

    forceable and the collateral pledged to secure it must be surren-

    dered.

    Throughout the litigation, Simon has maintained that

    the Bank breached the Modification Agreements the day before the ______

    Bank closed, by refusing to honor the Borrowers' October 18

    construction loan requisition. At oral argument, he conceded

    that the personal guaranty was no longer executory by the time

    FDIC became receiver on October 19, 1990. Cf. infra Section __ _____

    II.B. Similarly, his claim to the collateral securing the

    personal guaranty consistently has been based on the Bank's

    October 18 breach of the Modification Agreements. Moreover,

    Simon's November 27 letter to FDIC demanded both that the Bank ____

    release the collateral securing his personal guaranty and that ___

    the Bank honor the Borrowers' requisitions from October 18.

    Thus, Simon's position is and always has been that the

    Bank's pre-receivership refusal to honor the Borrowers' October ___

    18 loan requisition constituted a material breach of the Modifi-

    cation Agreements, entitling him to recover his collateral. It

    is clear, therefore, that the claim to the collateral securing

    the personal guaranty is barred as a "claim or action for payment

    from . . . the assets" of a failed financial institution for

    which FDIC has been appointed receiver. See 12 U.S.C. ___

    1821(d)(13)(D)(i).

    Simon concedes that the two real estate mortgages


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    securing his personal guaranty are bank "assets." Claims for the

    recovery of bank assets are barred absent compliance with the

    ACRP. Id. Simon was aware of FDIC's appointment as receiver on ___

    October 19, 1990, well before the ACRP bar date. Furthermore,

    Simon concededly knew, before the bar date, that he had a claim

    against FDIC for the return of the collateral. In these circum-

    stances, the failure to comply with the ACRP deprived the dis-

    trict court of jurisdiction over Simon's claim for recovery of

    the collateral securing his personal guaranty.1
    ____________________

    1Notwithstanding the jurisdictional bar to Simon's claim for
    the return of his collateral, he contends that the district court
    should have declared his personal guaranty discharged by the
    Bank's material breach of its Modification Agreements with the
    Borrowers, see, e.g., Ward v. American Mut. Liab. Ins. Co., 443 ___ ____ ____ _____________________________
    N.E.2d 1342, 1344 (Mass. App. 1983), and that such a claim for
    declaratory relief is not barred because it does not seek "pay-
    ment from" the Bank's "assets." Simon's complaint demanded a
    declaration extinguishing any personal liability arising under
    his loan guaranty; that is, precluding any future judgment
    against him for any deficiency over and above the amounts recov-
    erable by FDIC on the collateral securing his personal guaranty.
    Although the claim to the collateral is barred as one against __________
    "the [Bank's] assets," 12 U.S.C. 1821(d)(13)(D)(i), the judi-
    cial declaration requested by Simon is said to be purely defen-
    sive, designed to preempt any obligation on the part of Simon to
    make future payments to FDIC. See, e.g., National Union Fire __ ___ ____ ____________________
    Ins. Co. v. City Sav., FSB, 28 F.3d 376 (3d Cir. 1994) (holding _________ ______________
    that 1821(d)(13)(D)(i) bars contracting party from preemptive
    judicial declaration that contracting party is not liable on
    contract with failed institution, even though claim cannot be
    brought under ACRP; contracting party must await suit by receiver
    to enforce contract, at which time contracting party may raise
    rescission as affirmative defense to receiver's contract action).
    Simon urges us to reject the Third Circuit's interpretation in
    National Union, 28 F.3d at 386-89, that the alternate clause in ______________
    1821(d)(13)(D) (viz., "action[s] seeking a determination of ___
    rights with respect to [] the [bank's] assets,") bars his pre-
    emptive claim for declaratory relief.
    We find this an inappropriate setting for resolving the
    question in National Union, which was not raised below. In ______________
    addition, dismissal of these claims by the district court was in
    all events proper, since Simon's claimed entitlement to discharge

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    B. The Borrowers' Claims B. The Borrowers' Claims _____________________

    The Borrowers seek compensatory damages for FDIC's

    alleged post-bar-date repudiation of their pre-receivership

    Modification Agreements with the Bank. See id. 1821(e)(3)(i). ___ ___

    The Borrowers assert that all obligations they incurred to third

    parties after FDIC was appointed receiver are entitled to priori- _____

    ty status against Bank assets, on the theory that the Modifica-

    tion Agreements remained executory at the time FDIC was appointed

    receiver. Consequently, the Borrowers argue, the executory

    Modification Agreements remained open to affirmance or repudia-

    tion by FDIC within a reasonable period following its appoint-

    ment. See id. 1821(e)(1)-(2). Since FDIC has yet to affirm ___ ___

    the Modification Agreements, the Borrowers conclude that the

    agreements have been repudiated.

    Their claim is premature, for failure to exhaust

    ____________________

    fails as a matter of Massachusetts law. See Levy v. FDIC, 7 F.3d ___ ____ ____
    1054, 1056 (1st Cir. 1993) (appellate court is "free to affirm a
    district court's ruling 'on any ground supported in the record
    even if the issue was not pleaded, tried or otherwise referred to
    in the proceeding below'") (citations omitted). The Massachu-
    setts cases cited by Simon stand only for the generic contract-
    law proposition that a material breach excuses future performance
    by the non-breaching party. These cases do not purport to hold,
    however, that a loan guarantor is relieved from liability for
    delinquent pre-breach loan advances to the borrowers. The
    outstanding balances due by the Borrowers total well in excess of
    Simon's $900,000 unconditional guaranty. See generally Fleet ___ _________ _____
    Nat'l Bank v. Liuzzo, 766 F. Supp. 61, 65 (D.R.I. 1991) (describ- __________ ______
    ing nonmutality of promise to repay loan). Finally, Simon not
    only cites no contractual provision that even purports to entitle
    him to such blanket relief, but his January 1988 personal guaran-
    ty, incorporated by reference in the modified guaranty, is
    couched in unconditional language. ("The Guarantor's liability
    hereunder is absolute and unlimited . . . ."). Thus, the request
    for declaratory relief was properly rejected.

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    administrative remedies. See Heno v. FDIC, 20 F.3d at 1212-13 ___ ____ ____

    (publishing FDIC internal manual procedures for filing claims

    arising from FDIC's post-bar-date repudiation of executory pre-

    receivership contracts with failed institution). In Heno, we ____

    deferred to FDIC's construction of its enabling statute as

    according the agency first opportunity to evaluate alleged post-

    bar-date claims, including those arising after the ninety-day

    period following notice of FDIC's appointment as receiver, id. at ___

    1209. As the Borrowers have yet to exhaust their administrative

    remedies pursuant to the internal agency procedures published in

    Heno, we affirm the district court judgment, without prejudice to ____

    Borrowers' subsequent submission of an administrative claim to

    FDIC.

    The district court judgment is affirmed. The parties The district court judgment is affirmed. The parties ________________________________________ ___________

    are to bear their own costs. are to bear their own costs. ___________________________
























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