A property owner appeals from a ruling that keeps intact a bank’s lease notwithstanding both the bank’s failure and a clause in the lease ostensibly permitting the landlord to opt out upon the tenant’s insolvency. Because enforcing the lease despite the termination-upon-insolvency clause comports with the provisions of the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (FIRREA), Pub.L. No. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 12 U.S.C.), and because such enforcement constitutes neither a retroactive application of the newly enacted statute nor an unconstitutional taking of appellant’s property, we affirm the judgment below.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1986, plaintiff-appellant Edward McAndrews, in his capacity as trustee of the Iyanough Realty Trust, purchased real estate situated at 375 Iyanough Road, Hy-annis, Massachusetts (the Hyannis proper *15 ty). At the time, the premises were under lease to Merchants Bank & Trust Company of Cape Cod. The lease, executed in 1969, provided for a 20-year term with a 20-year renewal option. After appellant acquired the Hyannis property, the Bank of New England (BNE) merged with Merchants Bank and seasonably exercised the option.
Subsequently, Congress enacted FIR-REA, thus providing a mechanism to deal with financially distressed banks in a manner that preserves their going concern value and enhances the prospects of orderly administration during troubled times. FIRREA includes a provision allowing the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), as receiver, to enforce contracts previously entered into by failed banks notwithstanding contractual provisions designed to guard against exactly that eventuality. See 12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12)(A) (Supp. Ill 1991). 1 This section has particular pertinence in the present situation since the Hyannis lease contains a termination-upon-insolvency clause (which we shall call an ipso facto clause) permitting the lessor to abrogate the lease if any regulatory authority, such as the FDIC, takes over the tenant bank. 2
FIRREA was effective on the date of its enactment,
viz.,
August 9, 1989.
See Demars v. First Serv. Bank for Sav.,
Appellant then sought a declaration of rights in federal district court, naming NBNE and FDIC as defendants. 3 He argued that section 1821(e)(12)(A) should only be applied to leases executed after FIR-REA’s effective date. In appellant’s view, applying the statute to a preexisting lease containing an ipso facto clause effectively nullifies the clause, therefore constituting an improper retroactive application of the statute; and, moreover, effects a taking without compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
The district court rejected these twin as-severations and granted summary judgment in defendants’ favor.
See McAndrews v. New Bank of New England,
II. RETROACTIVE APPLICATION
It is a settled rule that courts should not apply statutes retroactively when doing so would significantly impair existing substantive rights and, thus, disappoint legitimate expectations.
See, e.g., Bradley v. Richmond Sch. Bd.,
The determination of whether a statute’s application in a particular situation is prospective or retroactive depends upon whether the conduct that allegedly triggers the statute’s application occurs before or after the law’s effective date. Hence, a statute’s application is usually deemed prospective when it implicates conduct occurring on or after the effective date.
See Cox v. Hart,
This means, of course, that a statute may modify the legal effect of a present status or alter a preexisting relationship without running up against the retroactivity hurdle. The key lies in how the law interacts with the facts. So long as a neoteric law determines status solely for the purpose of future matters, its application is deemed prospective.
See New Orleans Pub. Serv.,
Employing these first principles, FIR-REA’s reach in this case cannot be deemed retroactive. Signing a lease containing an ipso facto clause does not in itself unleash section 1821(e)(12)(A). Only subsequent events can pull the trigger. Here, for example, FIRREA was brought into play through a collocation of circumstances, all occurring well after the law’s effective date: the tenant’s insolvency, the FDIC’s appointment as receiver, and the landlord’s attempt to utilize the lease’s escape hatch. It follows that, because the conduct triggering the statute’s application occurred long after FIRREA’s enactment, using section 1821(e) to trump the ipso facto clause constitutes a prospective use of the statute regardless of when the lease was executed. 4 Any other result would twist FIR-REA’s structure, do violence to its clear language, and needlessly frustrate Con *17 gress’s intent to “deal expeditiously with failed financial institutions.” H.R.Conf. Rep. No. 101-222, 101st Cong., 1st Sess. (1989), reprinted in 1989 U.S.C.C.A.N. 86, 432. After all, if courts were to construe FIRREA so as to shield from its grasp all claims arising from contracts formed before FIRREA’s enactment, Congress’s efforts to protect the public from existing and anticipated bank failures would be hamstrung.
Our conclusion that the district court’s use of section 1821(e) did not constitute a retroactive application is fortified by three other pieces of supporting data. The first is the opinion in
Hawke Assocs. v. City Fed. Sav. Bank,
Second, we find instructive the caselaw construing section 365(e)(1) of the Bankruptcy Code, 11 U.S.C. § 365(e)(1) (1988). Courts have consistently held that section 365, an enactment which renders termination-upon-insolvency clauses unenforceable in bankruptcy, applies to leases predating the Code.
See, e.g., Matter of Triangle Lab., Inc.,
Third, we take some modest comfort in the awareness that a variety of FIRREA provisions, albeit provisions of an essentially procedural nature, have been held to affect claims arising out of contracts entered into prior to FIRREA’s enactment.
See, e.g., Demars,
For these reasons, we reject appellant’s principal assignment of error, concluding that, by construing section 1821 to trump the lease’s preexisting ipso facto clause, the district court carried out a proper prospective application of the statute.
III. THE TAKINGS CLAUSE
We move now to appellant’s fallback position. He asserts that applying FIRREA to thwart a preexisting termination-upon-insolvency clause violates the Fifth Amendment.
6
On this point, appellant argues that his inability to abort the lease and repossess the property notwithstanding the tenant bank’s failure destroys his right to the use and enjoyment of the leased premises, thereby effecting an unconstitutional taking without compensation
*18
analogous to those arising from various proscribed physical invasions.
See, e.g., Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
— U.S. -, -,
The concept of a “taking” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment defies precise definition.
7
Indeed, the Supreme Court has “eschewed the development of any set formula” for determining which property-right infringements constitute compensable takings, relying “instead on ad hoc, factual inquiries into the circumstances of each particular case.”
Connolly v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp.,
We first assess the severity of the economic impact. The hallmark of an unconstitutional taking is, of course, the denial of the “economically viable use of [an owner’s] land.”
Agins v. City of Tiburon,
The economic regulation involved here deprives appellant only of his right to terminate the lease upon the FDIC’s appointment as receiver. He still enjoys all other common-law rights particular to lessors; all other provisions in the lease, including those that allow appellant to terminate the lease for, say, breach of the agreement to pay rent in a timely fashion or breach of the covenant to maintain the premises in good order, remain in full force. FIR-REA’s application, then, can hardly be said to deprive appellant of anything remotely resembling his entire bundle of rights.
What is more, the present tenant, as FDIC’s assignee, is not a free rider. It must use the premises only for the purposes permitted in the lease, abide by the lease’s covenants, and pay the rent and other emoluments stipulated in the lease. Thus, the only economic harm that befalls appellant from a frustration of the
ipso facto
clause is whatever anticipatory harm may stem from his lost opportunity to re-rent the Hyannis property at a potentially more lucrative rate. Such a “loss” does not weigh heavily in the constitutional balance.
See id.
at 66,
The second significant factor in determining whether a regulation constitutes a Fifth Amendment taking implicates the extent of the interference with investment-backed expectations. The inquiry into this factor further undermines appellant’s position.
Although prudent landlords pepper leases with a myriad of provisions designed to guard against worst-case contingencies, landlords nevertheless lease property in the expectation that they will receive the agreed-upon rent, not in the hope that adverse contingencies will materialize and bring contractual safeguards into play. Moreover, considering the pervasive regulation that has long characterized the banking industry,
see, e.g., Fahey v. Mallonee,
Given that the reasonable expectation to which a landlord is entitled is an uninterrupted stream of rent at the contract rate, not the future exercise of a termination-upon-insolvency clause, FIRREA cannot be viewed as interfering with a vested property interest, the usurpation of which would require compensation.
See Penn Cent.,
Turning to the third factor, we do not think that the governmental action here at issue resembles a physical invasion. The government, through FIRREA, is not appropriating appellant’s property for its own use. Rather, it is altering the future operation of landlords’ and tenants’ preexisting contractual rights in order to stem the disruption of banking services within communities, lessen the costs of bank liquidation, and restore public confidence in the nation’s banking system. In short, FIR-REA’s role here is to reallocate economic pluses and minuses in what we find to be an apt illustration of the aphorism that “Congress routinely creates burdens for some that directly benefit others.”
Connolly,
In a nutshell, the character of the governmental action strongly favors the appel-lees’ position. The mere fact that future obeisance to the newly enacted law might cause a property owner, as in this case, to forgo an opportunity for gain is no more than a necessary consequence of FIR-REA’s regulatory regime. Hence, if there is an invasion of a property right at all, it is a tiny invasion of a lambent right, arising “from a public program that adjusts the benefits and burdens of economic life to promote the common good,”
id.
at 225,
We need go no further. Here, the three integers composing the applicable equation *20 unanimously suggest rejection of appellant's Takings Clause argument. We heed that counsel.
IV. CONCLUSION
To recapitulate, applying section 1821(e)(12)(A) to trump the ipso facto clause in the Hyannis lease is a prospective application of FIRREA and, thus, lawful. Furthermore, the resulting impairment of the landlord’s right to terminate the lease upon the tenant bank’s failure does not infract the Takings Clause. The judgment of the district court must, therefore, be
Affirmed.
Notes
. The statute provides in relevant part that the FDIC, qua receiver,
may enforce any contract ... entered into by the depository institution notwithstanding any provision of the contract providing for termination, default, acceleration, or exercise of rights upon, or solely by reason of, insolvency or the appointment of a conservator or receiver.
12 U.S.C. § 1821(e)(12)(A).
. The ipso facto clause is embodied in section 6.1 of the lease. It states:
If ... the Lessee is closed or taken over by the banking authority of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts or other bank supervisory authority, ... the Lessor lawfully may immediately or at any time thereafter and without demand or notice, enter upon the premises or any part thereof in the name of the whole, and repossess the same ... and expel the Lessee_
. In July 1991, Fleet Bank of Massachusetts purchased NBNE’s leasehold interest in the Hy-annis property. Fleet has replaced NBNE as a defendant and appellee.
. In attempting to buttress its claim of retroac-tivity, appellant relies on
United States v. Security Indus. Bank,
Hodel
involved a statute forbidding certain testamentary transfers. As applied, the statute operated to extinguish devises originating with individuals who died after the act's effective date.
See
. There are other decisions to like effect. In
Longley I Realty Trust,
. The Fifth Amendment states in part that:
No person shall ... be deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.
U.S. Const, amend. V.
. Withal, the court has identified two discrete categories of regulatory takings that, if left uncompensated, constitute unconstitutional takings
per se.
These categories, which need no "case-specific inquiry into the public interest advanced in support of the restraint,” are (1) permanent physical invasions and (2) regulations which “den[y] all economically beneficial or productive use of land."
Lucas,
— U.S. at -,
