delivered the opinion of the court:
This case, here by transfer from the Northern District of California, is before the court after oral argument on the parties’ cross-motions for summary judgment. They relate to the first cause of action only. The issue presented is whether the government’s act as a holder of a second mortgage in challenging the validity of a first mortgage effects a taking or breaches a contract. For the reasons discussed herein, we find no government liability under either theory.
In 1966, plaintiff Woodland Development Company (Woodland), a joint venture, began construction of a 262 unit multi-family housing project for the elderly known as the "Park Lane” located in Monterey, California. The joint venture was comprised of O.D.C. Parklane, Inc. and plaintiff Sanford B. Weiss. The purchase was financed by the Fidelity Bank of Beverly Hills, California (Woodland-Fidelity note) in the amount of $6,400,300 at 5% percent interest, secured by a real property mortgage on the Park Lane. The Secretary of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) issued a commitment for insurance of the loan pursuant to Section 231 of the National Housing Act, 12 U.S.C. §1715v. HUD endorsed the note on December 19, 1967. On December 19, 1967, to secure the amount owed for personal property received, Woodland executed a $190,000 note and chattel mortgage to Project Management Company (PMC), a wholly-owned subsidiary of plaintiff DSI Corporation of which plaintiff Weiss was the sole shareholder. PMC later was merged into DSI. Woodland also executed a purportedly subordinate mortgage on these same chattels as additional security for the Fidelity Bank loan. Fidelity Bank thereafter assigned the Woodland note and chattel mortgage to the New York State Employees’ Retirement Fund.
On April 29, 1969, the United States on behalf of HUD commenced a foreclosure action against Woodland and Weiss on both the realty and chattel mortgages assigned to HUD. In that action, the government attacked the PMC chattel mortgage as a fraud and void for lack of consideration, alleging PMC and Woodland were mere alter egos of Sanford Weiss. The district court in United States v. Woodland Development Co., No. C-51248 (N.D. Cal. 1969), issued an order granting the United States immediate possession of the Park Lane and all property located therein for the purpose of managing the property as mortgagee in possession. In that foreclosure action, Weiss filed a series of counterclaims alleging government mismanagement, breach of contract, and tortious activities. On August 6, 1973, Woodland and Weiss filed suit against the Secretary of HUD in DSI Corp. v. Secretary of HUD, Civil Action No. C-73-1349-RFP (N.D. Cal.), raising the same issues as in their counterclaims in the foreclosure action.
On August 13, 1974, Judge Peckham of the United States District Court of Northern California dismissed Woodland’s counterclaim and ordered foreclosure. That decision did not resolve the priority dispute over the chattel mortgages. During the period of government possession of Park Lane, the government utilized the personal property secured by the PMC chattel mortgage and made no payment to PMC. As the district court’s decision did not address the validity of the PMC chattel mortgage and the government wanted to sell the Park Lane without a cloud on the title of the personal property located therein, the government decided to negotiate with DSI to obtain clear title. Pursuant to the agreement, DSI foreclosed its interest on the PMC chattels and purchased that property at the foreclosure sale on March 30, 1976. On June 1, 1976, HUD purchased the DSI chattels for $165,000.
On April 18, 1975, the district court in DSI Corp. v. Secretary of HUD, supra, entered a judgment of dismissal
Before us, plaintiffs complain of two ramifications of the government’s action in challenging the validity of the Woodland-PMC chattel mortgage. Plaintiffs first complain that they were denied the use or income from the chattels secured by the PMC mortgage as a result of Judge Peckham’s order granting the government possession. Second, plaintiffs contend that because the chattel mortgage assigned to defendant was a second mortgage, various contracts and the theory of estoppel by deed required the government not to attack the validity of the first mortgage. When the government did, in fact, challenge the first mortgage, plaintiffs say the government breached various contracts. Additionally, plaintiffs urge we find a taking without compensation because the government’s attack on the PMC chattel mortgage destroyed its value to plaintiffs.
1. Judge Peckham’s order.
Judge Peckham’s order in the 1969 foreclosure action granted the United States immediate possession of the Park Lane and all property located therein. Seven years later, PMC foreclosed on the chattel property; but during that 7-year interim period, PMC argues it was not paid for the value of the government’s use of the property and hence was subjected to a taking.
On these facts, plaintiffs have demonstrated no taking. When the government "takes” property, it exercises its right as sovereign to acquire property from the rightful owner for the public good. See, e.g., Pollard v. Hagan,
It is true we have recently held that this court will take jurisdiction of a title dispute under a taking theory when the government is in possession asserting itself to be the owner and under claim of right. Bourgeois v. United States.
2. Destruction of value of PMC chattel mortage.
Plaintiffs contend that the government attacks on the validity of the PMC chattel mortgage destroyed its value since no one would purchase a mortgage of questionable validity. Plaintiffs then argue that both the law and various contracts between plaintiffs and defendant require that the government not challenge the mortgage’s validity. By doing this, the government is liable for a breach of contract if not a taking.
Plaintiffs cite a number of agreements to attempt to show the government explicitly and impliedly agreed it would not challenge the validity of the PMC chattel mortgage:
(1) A regulatory agreement entered into between Woodland and the government — Under this agreement Woodland was permitted to furnish the Park Lane through chattel mortgage financing. Any chattel mortgage taken out on such personal property was required to give the Fidelity Bank (or the government as its successor) the opportunity to assume the financing upon default of the mortgagor, Woodland Development Company.
(2) PMC-Fidelity Bank Inter-Credit Subordination Agreement — Plaintiffs allege Fidelity Bank agreed to recognize a senior lien in favor of the PMC chattel mortgage.
(3) Woodland-Fidelity Bank Chattel Mortgage — Plaintiffs allege this agreement states on its face it is subordinate to the PMC chattel mortgage.
(4) Fidelity Bank-Federal Housing Administration Commitment for Insurance — Plaintiffs allege this agreement provided that PMC was to be accorded lien status senior to the government.
We disregard the serious issues of contract privity these contentions raise. Simply as interpreting the agreements involved, with whomsoever made, plaintiffs’ constructions are strained and unfounded. The regulatory agreement merely required that any chattel mortgages contain a provision allowing the real property mortgagee to assume the payments due should Woodland default. Such a provision was probably inserted to allow a mortgagee in possession to make payments due on the property secured by the chattel mortgage. Without such a requirement, the holder of the chattel mortgage might foreclose on personal property necessary for the continued operation of the project by a mortgagee in possession. This contract reasonably read and interpreted cannot be said to contain any guarantee by the government not to challenge the validity of the PMC mortgage. The PMC-Fidelity agreement merely stated that PMC held a lien senior to that of Fidelity, and that PMC would provide notice of any default by Woodland and allow Fidelity the opportunity to assume Woodland’s interest. The agreement has no bearing at all on the issue of challenging the mortgage. Likewise, we have examined the Woodland-Fidelity Bank agreement and the Fidelity Bank-FHA commitment for insurance and find nothing to indicate these agreements should be read as a contractual agreement that the PMC chattel mortgage would not be challenged.
Even if these contracts do not expressly indicate any government agreement concerning the PMC chattel mortgage, plaintiffs argue there were implied in fact agreements. Plaintiffs state that HUD originally would have required the financing of the personal property necessary for the basic operation of the Park Lane be accomplished through an escrow deposit of $190,615. Following Woodland’s request, the government allowed the substitute
We find no merit to plaintiffs’ argument. An implied in fact agreement is one "founded upon a meeting of minds, which, although not embodied in an express contract, is inferred, as a fact, from conduct of the parties showing, in the light of the surrounding circumstances, their tacit understanding.” Algonac Manufacturing Co. v. United States,
Plaintiffs’ last contract claim, based on a third party beneficiary theory is equally without merit. Plaintiffs contend that PMC was a direct third party beneficiary of the various agreements described above. However, our analysis above shows there was no contractual pledge contained in any of the agreements not to challenge the PMC mortgage. Plaintiffs, therefore, cannot claim to be third party beneficiaries of phantom agreements.
Closely related to plaintiffs’ contract arguments is plaintiffs’ contention that it can recover under the theory of estoppel by deed. Under that doctrine, a mortgagee is estopped from attacking the validity of a prior mortgage if the mortgage held by the subsequent mortgagee expressly recites it is subject to the prior mortgage. E.g., Territory of Alaska v. Guerin,
When plaintiffs’ petition is stripped of its legal maskings, plaintiffs only arguable claim of recovery is based on this equitable theory. Plaintiffs state the government agreed to allow chattel mortgage financing, and Woodland and PMC
Suppose the asserted estoppel by deed were effective against private mortgagees, which we do not hold, we do not agree that the doctrine is properly invoked to prevent defendant United States from challenging on grounds of subsequently discovered fraud a chattel mortgage it has previously acknowledged as paramount to its own interest in the chattels. This variety of equitable estoppel is not now highly regarded if it stands in the way of any important public policy. Thus, a patent licensee was once viewed as estopped by accepting the license from attacking the validity of the patent, but in Lear, Inc. v. Adkins,
Even if the doctrine could be invoked against the government, plaintiffs could not recover. A claim based on estoppel by deed is not based on the contract between the parties, but is instead implied by law on the basis of equitable notions. 28 Am. Jur., supra. Any monetary claim implied in law is beyond our jurisdiction. E.g. Porter v. United States,
Therefore, for the reasons discussed above, we find that respecting the first cause of action, the government neither took any of plaintiffs’ property without just compensation, nor breached any contract with plaintiffs, nor was bound by estoppel not to challenge the chattel mortgage. Plaintiffs’ motion for summary judgment is denied. Defendant’s
