This is a Winstar-mlated breach of contract case.
See United States v. Winstar Corp.,
I
Two prior Court of Federal Claims decisions in this case set forth the facts in detail.
See Admiral Fin. Corp. v. United States,
In February 1987, William Lee Popham contacted the Federal Home Loan Bank Board (“Bank Board”) to discuss acquiring a failing savings and loan institution, or “thrift.” In exchange for acquiring ownership, Mr. Popham offered to contribute assets to the thrift, including real estate, equity in a tax sale certificate business, marketable securities, and cash. The Bank Board suggested Haven Federal Savings & Loan as a candidate for acquisition. In April 1987, Mr. Popham formed Admiral Financial Corp. for the purpose of acquiring Haven. In August 1987, Admiral and Haven entered into an acquisition agreement under which Admiral agreed to contribute $6.4 million in real estate and *1338 cash in order to bring Haven into compliance with the Bank Board’s minimum capital requirements. The agreement was conditioned on the Bank Board’s giving Admiral certain forbearances in connection with the regulatory oversight of Haven.
In September 1987, Admiral applied for Bank Board approval of its merger with Haven. After several iterations, the Bank Board deemed the application complete in February of 1988. The Bank Board issued a resolution in April 1988 formally approving the merger. The resolution incorporated a business plan under which Admiral agreed to liquidate the contributed real estate according to a schedule. The resolution also contemplated that the Bank Board would treat Haven’s negative net worth as “goodwill,” an asset, rather than as a liability. Haven initially recorded nearly $9 million of goodwill based on its negative net worth. In May 1988, additional terms were incorporated by letter into the resolution, including the Bank Board’s agreement to allow the goodwill to be amortized over a period of 25 years using the straight-line method of depreciation.
In June 1988, the Bank Board and Admiral executed a Regulatory Capital Maintenance/Dividend Agreement (“RCMA”). The RCMA bound Admiral to maintain a certain level of capital in Haven, and it obligated Admiral to make up any capital shortfall. The agreement provided that if Haven’s capital fell below the level specified in the RCMA, Admiral would have 90 days to infuse enough capital into Haven to make up the shortfall. If Admiral failed to make up the shortfall, it would be in default.
Things did not go well for Haven after its acquisition by Admiral. In March 1989, Haven sold a portion of the contributed real estate at substantially below the appraised value that had been accepted by the Bank Board. In addition, the equity interest in a business that Admiral had contributed to Haven and had valued at $4.1 million turned out to be valueless. By the end of March 1989, Haven was out of regulatory capital compliance by approximately $580,000. Pursuant to the RCMA, Admiral was obligated within 90 days to infuse enough capital into Haven to make up the shortfall. Admiral did not do so. Instead, Haven’s financial condition further deteriorated, resulting in a shortfall of approximately $2.3 million by June 1989. On July 17,1989, the Bank Board provided Admiral with an official notice of default.
According to the RCMA, Admiral was entitled to 90 days from the date of the default notice to cure the default. On August 2, 1989, the Bank Board removed Mr. Popham from his role as Haven’s executive vice president and chief financial officer, but allowed him to remain a member of the Haven board of directors at no compensation. On August 9, 1989, nearly a month into the 90-day cure period, Congress enacted the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act, Pub.L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (1989) (“FIRREA”), which limited Admiral’s ability to count Haven’s goodwill as an asset and to amortize it over a lengthy time period. FIRREA, however, did not take effect until December 7, 1989, and as of September 30, 1989, Haven was more than $4 million out of compliance under the pre-FIRREA accounting methods.
In March 1990, the Office of Thrift Supervision (“OTS”), the Bank Board’s successor under FIRREA, placed Haven in receivership. At that time, Haven was more than $22 million out of regulatory capital compliance under FIRREA. It was approximately $12 million out of compliance under pre-FIRREA accounting methods.
In 1993, Admiral filed suit against the government, alleging,
inter alia,
that the
*1339
enactment of FIRREA resulted in a breach by the government of its contract with Admiral. The Court of Federal Claims agreed, ruling on summary judgment that Admiral and the Bank Board had an enforceable contract that the government had breached when it enacted FIRREA.
Admiral Fin. Corp. v. United States,
The court held that even if Admiral did not anticipatorily breach the contract, Admiral could not recover damages for the government’s breach because FIRREA did not cause it any injury.
II
The government argues that by the terms of its contract Admiral assumed the risk of the regulatory changes brought about by FIRREA and that the enactment of FIRREA therefore did not breach the government’s contractual obligations. The government did not prevail on that argument in the trial court, but it advances the argument here as an alternative ground for affirmance.
In a section entitled “Miscellaneous Provisions,” the RCMA included clause VI(D), which provided as follows:
All references to regulations of the Board or the FSLIC used in this Agreement shall include any successor regulation thereto, it being expressly understood that subsequent amendments to such regulations may be made and that such amendments may increase or decrease the Acquirors’ obligation under this Agreement.
On its face, clause VI(D) contemplated that the government might alter the regulations governing the supervision of thrifts such as Haven; by agreeing to the clause, Admiral acknowledged that its obligations might change if the regulatory regime changed.
In
Guaranty Financial Services, Inc. v. Ryan,
Admiral asserts that
Guaranty
is not binding on this court. While that is true, we accord great weight to the decisions of our sister circuits when the same or similar issues come before us, and we “do not create conflicts among the circuits without strong cause.”
Wash. Energy Co. v. United States,
Although recognizing that
Guaranty
is contrary to its position in this case, Admiral contends that this court’s decision in
Castle v. United States,
We do not agree with Admiral’s reading of our decision in
Castle.
The court in
Castle
addressed a takings claim made by a party that acquired a thrift with a promise of regulatory forbearances similar to those at issue in this case.
Although the
Castle
court ruled that the plaintiff “retained the full range of remedies associated with any contractual property right they possessed,”
The trial court in this case agreed with Admiral and ruled that Admiral did not assume the risk of the regulatory changes brought about by FIRREA.
See
*1341
Admiral I,
We disagree with the trial court’s analysis on this point. Clause VI(D) does not contain any qualifications of the sort to which the trial court referred. The clause states that the government might make changes to the regulations that could increase Admiral’s obligation under the contract. It does not limit those changes to increasing or decreasing the level of capital that thrifts must maintain, as opposed to changing the accounting methods the Bank Board requires. And as for the trial court’s concern that the government’s interpretation of the clause would render the contract illusory, the government’s reservation of the right to change the extent of its performance as to some of its promises does not render the contract illusory as long as the government has otherwise given consideration, as is plainly the case here. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 80(2) (1979) (“The fact that part of what is bargained for would not have been consideration if that part alone had been bargained for does not prevent the whole from being consideration.”).
The trial court relied on
Sterling Savings v. United States,
We do not believe
Guaranty
can be distinguished in that manner. The court in
Guaranty
found that the language in question altered the government’s obligations with respect to the regulatory capital and amortization issues and shifted to Guaranty the risk of FIRREA’s regulatory change with respect to those issues. The
Guaranty
court “interpret[ed] the contract to mean that Guaranty had the right to treat its goodwill as regulatory capital and amortize it over a twenty-five year period for so long as the statutes and regulations governing the area remained as they were when the agreement was signed.”
Guaranty,
In the other case on which the trial court relied,
Southern California Federal Savings & Loan Ass’n v. United States,
the language of the purported risk-shifting clause was significantly different from the language of the clause at issue here. The
*1342
clause at issue in
Southern California
merely stated that the acquirer was obligated to maintain capital in compliance with existing or future regulations.
Language similar to that in the
Southern California
contract was included in the contract at issue in
California Federal Bank v. United States,
The plurality opinion in Winstar addressed contract language similar to the language of the contracts in Southern California and California Federal Bank as follows:
The Government also cites a provision requiring Statesman to “comply in all material respects with all applicable statutes, regulations, orders of, and restrictions imposed by the United States or ... by any agency of [the United States],” but this simply meant that Statesman was required to observe FIR-REA’s new capital requirements once they were promulgated. The clause was hardly necessary to oblige Statesman to obey the law, and nothing in it barred Statesman from asserting that passage of that law required the Government to take action itself or be in breach of its contract.
We read this promise as the law of contracts has always treated promises to provide something beyond the promi-sor’s absolute control, that is, as a promise to insure the promisee against loss arising from the promised condition’s nonoccurrence.
To be sure, each side could have eliminated any serious contest about the correctness of their interpretive positions by using clearer language. See, e.g., Guaranty Financial Services, Inc. v. Ryan,928 F.2d 994 , 999-1000 (C.A.11 1991) (finding, based on very different contract language, that the Government had expressly reserved the right to change the capital requirements without any responsibility to the acquiring thrift). The failure to be even more explicit is perhaps more surprising here, given the size and complexity of these transactions. But few contract cases would be in court if contract language had articulated the parties’ postbreach positions as clearly as might have been done, and the failure to specify remedies in the contract is no reason to find that the parties intended no remedy at all.
Winstar,
Thus,
Winstar
stands for the proposition that the government is still obligated to
*1343
honor its contracts even if the governing regulations change.
See
Ill
Although the trial court did not agree with the government that the contract shifted the risk of regulatory change to Admiral, the court nonetheless rejected Admiral’s claim for damages. The trial court based its ruling in part on its conclusion that even if the government breached a contract with Admiral, the enactment of FIRREA did not cause Admiral -harm.
Admiral III,
The trial court’s no-injury finding was based on a detailed analysis of the financial status of Admiral and Haven and a careful assessment of the likely impact of the enactment of FIRREA on their fortunes. In particular, the court found that Haven was running operational deficits long before FIRREA was proposed, and that Haven was likely to continue running deficits in the future regardless of whether FIRREA was enacted.
The court concluded that Haven “was in such dire straits that it was failing under pre-FIRREA capital requirements,” and that
[h]ad all its goodwill been counted toward its regulatory capital, Haven would still have been insolvent: Haven had negative core capital as of December 31, 1989. This means that even if Admiral had been able to replace all of Haven’s goodwill with cash on September 30, 1989, Haven would still have been at least $4 million formally below its minimum capital requirement, and perhaps more than $10 million, counting expected real estate losses, and a write-off of the TSC business.
Admiral argues that the enactment of FIRREA injured it by making it impossi
*1344
ble for Admiral to find a merger partner or acquirer. Addressing that argument, the trial court acknowledged that FIR-REA “did not help matters” for Admiral, but concluded that even without FIRREA, a potential acquirer would have had to compensate for a $12 million capital shortfall.
Admiral further argues that because it sought restitution rather than damages, it is irrelevant whether the enactment of FIRREA was the cause of Admiral’s loss. Admiral’s position is that once the government breached the contract by enacting FIRREA, Admiral was entitled to elect restitution as a remedy and to recover its initial investment regardless of what would have happened in the absence of breach.
Although restitution ordinarily serves as a remedy for unjust enrichment, it has been recognized as an alternative measure of contract damages when a plaintiffs expectation damages are difficult to ascertain.
See Restatement of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment
§ 38 cmt. a (Tentative Draft No. 3 2004) (“ ‘Restitution damages’ ... are closely analogous in function to ‘reliance damages,’ in that both offer what is ordinarily a second-best alternative to a party injured by breach who cannot prove damages measured by expectation.”). Thus, “[wjhen proof of expectancy damages fails, the law provides a fallback position for the injured party—he can sue for restitution.”
Glendale Fed. Bank, FSB v. United States,
Courts have also recognized the availability of restitution when a party injured by a contract breach is allowed to treat the contract as rescinded and to return to the status quo ante instead of relying on the terms of the contract to obtain damages or specific performance.
See Restatement of Restitution and Unjust Enrichment
§ 37 and cmt. a (Tentative Draft No. 3 2004). However, an injured party is entitled to rescission only if the defendant repudiated the contract or committed a total breach.
See Mobil Oil Exploration & Producing Southeast, Inc. v. United States,
A “total breach” is a breach that “so substantially impairs the value of the contract to the injured party at the time of the breach that it is just in the circumstances to allow him to recover damages based on all his remaining rights to performance.”
Mobil Oil,
In this case, as noted above, the trial court found that at the time of the breach Admiral was in such dire straits that it would not have been able to recover, even absent a breach. Thus, the court found that even under the pre-FIRREA requirements Admiral would not have been able to infuse enough capital in the thrift to avoid receivership. Given Haven’s condition in 1989 and 1990, the trial court found that the enactment of FIRREA had no practical effect on Admiral’s ability to find the necessary additional funding for the thrift. Therefore, the government’s action did not “substantially impair[ ] the value of the contract to the injured party at the time of the breach” so as to make rescission an appropriate remedy.
Mobil Oil,
Moreover, even if the remedy of restitution would otherwise be appropriate, this court has noted that restitution should not be awarded if it would result in a windfall to the nonbreaching party.
See Hansen Bancorp,
IV
Admiral asserts that the trial court erred in concluding that Admiral anticipa-torily breached the contract. Because we decide that Admiral may not recover on the contract both because it assumed the risk of regulatory change and because the enactment of FIRREA did not harm Admiral, we need not reach the issue of anticipatory breach. In light of our rulings on those two issues, we also find it unnecessary to address the government’s argument that no enforceable contract was formed between the government and Admiral.
AFFIRMED.
